State of New Jersey v. Kwamere T. Benjamin ( 2024 )


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  •                                 NOT FOR PUBLICATION WITHOUT THE
    APPROVAL OF THE APPELLATE DIVISION
    This opinion shall not "constitute precedent or be binding upon any court ." Although it is posted on the
    internet, this opinion is binding only on the parties in the case and its use in other cases is limited. R. 1:36-3.
    SUPERIOR COURT OF NEW JERSEY
    APPELLATE DIVISION
    DOCKET NO. A-2056-20
    A-2511-20
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    KWAMERE T. BENJAMIN,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    ________________________
    STATE OF NEW JERSEY,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    TYLER E. DRALLE,
    Defendant-Appellant.
    _______________________
    Submitted (A-2056-20) and Argued (A-2511-20)
    November 15, 2023 – Decided November 4, 2024
    Before Judges Accurso, Vernoia and Gummer.
    On appeal from the Superior Court of New Jersey, Law
    Division, Camden County, Indictment No. 18-02-0233.
    Joseph E. Krakora, Public Defender, attorney for
    appellant Kwamere T. Benjamin (Stefan Van Jura,
    Assistant Deputy Public Defender, of counsel and on
    the brief).
    Grace C. MacAulay, Camden County Prosecutor,
    attorney for respondent in A-2056-20 (Kevin J. Hein,
    Assistant Prosecutor, of counsel and on the brief).
    Robin Kay Lord argued the cause for appellant Tyler E.
    Dralle (The Law Office of Robin Kay Lord, attorneys;
    Robin Kay Lord, on the briefs).
    Maura M. Sullivan, Assistant Prosecutor, argued the
    cause for respondent in A-2511-21 (Grace C.
    MacAulay, Camden County Prosecutor, attorney;
    Maura M. Sullivan, of counsel and on the brief).
    The opinion of the court was delivered by
    VERNOIA, J.A.D.
    In these back-to-back cases we have consolidated for purposes of issuing
    a single opinion, defendants Kwamere T. Benjamin and Tyler E. Dralle appeal
    from their convictions and sentences for murder, felony-murder, robbery,
    burglary, and weapons offenses. Having considered their respective arguments,
    the record, and the applicable legal principles, we affirm defendants'
    convictions, affirm Dralle's sentence, and vacate Benjamin's sentence and
    remand his case for resentencing.
    A-2056-20
    2
    I.
    On June 25, 2017, Deanna Scordo was found shot and killed in the second-
    floor bedroom of the Winslow Township home she shared with her father,
    Anthony Scordo, Jr., on the family's blueberry farm.1 Deanna had been shot
    three times, including once in the head at close range.
    A Camden County grand jury later charged defendants in an indictment
    with the following offenses arising from the circumstances resulting in Deanna's
    death: second-degree unlawful possession of a handgun, N.J.S.A. 2C:39-5(b)(1)
    (count one); second-degree possession of a handgun for an unlawful purpose,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:39-4(a)(1) (count two); second-degree conspiracy to commit armed
    burglary, N.J.S.A. 2C:5-2 and 2C:18-2(a)(1) (count three); second-degree
    burglary, N.J.S.A. 2C:18-2(a)(1) (count four); first-degree armed robbery,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:15-1(a)(1) (count five); felony murder, N.J.S.A. 2C:11-3(a)(3)
    (count six); and purposeful or knowing murder, N.J.S.A. 2C;11-3(a)(1)-(2)
    (count seven).
    Prior to defendants' joint trial on the charges, Dralle moved to suppress
    physical evidence—a supermarket receipt—seized from his car pursuant to a
    1
    For convenience and clarity, we refer to individuals who share the same
    surname by their first names, intending no disrespect.
    A-2056-20
    3
    search warrant and surveillance recordings from the supermarket that were
    obtained based on information gleaned from the receipt.            After hearing
    argument, the court denied the suppression motion, finding the search warrant
    had been issued based on a sufficient showing of probable cause.
    In a pretrial motion, Benjamin moved for severance of his trial from
    Dralle's. Dralle did not join in the motion. In part, Benjamin sought severance
    because Dralle's statements to the police had implicated Benjamin in the crimes
    charged. The court denied the motion on various grounds and ordered that the
    State could not during its case in chief reference or introduce in evidence
    Dralle's statements to the police implicating Benjamin.
    The evidence presented at defendants' trial established that on June 25,
    2017, Anthony had been asleep in his bedroom on the second floor of the family
    farmhouse when he was awakened at some point after 3:30 a.m. by a "scream"
    and "gunshots." Upon leaving his bedroom, he noticed second-floor lights were
    on and he saw two men running down the stairs.
    Anthony called 9-1-1 after finding Deanna on the floor of her second-floor
    bedroom, where she had been shot. Anthony told the 9-1-1 operator that Deanna
    had been "shot twice" and he did not know if she was breathing. It was later
    determined Deanna had been shot three times; once in the chest and shoulder as
    A-2056-20
    4
    she laid in bed, and once with a very close-range shot to her head after she had
    fallen to the floor.
    Anthony told the 9-1-1 operator that he had seen two males wearing "black
    hood[s]" running down the stairs, and they had run "out of the house." Anthony
    later discovered that money and weapons had been taken from the home.
    Anthony testified that two envelopes of cash—one containing $2,600 and the
    other containing between $2,100 and $2,300—had been taken from a kitchen
    cabinet and $276 in rolled coins had been taken from a first-floor bedroom. He
    also testified that two long guns—a rifle and shotgun—had been taken from the
    first floor.
    Police arrived at the Scordo residence and found a screen door had been
    propped open with a cinderblock. The first floor had been ransacked, the kitchen
    cabinets were open, and papers were strewn over the kitchen counter. The police
    found Deanna's body face down "just inside her bedroom door." Two shell
    casings were found in the bedroom and a third casing was found in the hallway.
    The recovered casings "had been discharged by the same firearm." The cause
    of Deanna's death was later determined to be "multiple gunshot wounds."
    Detectives interviewed Anthony. He reported he had previously been in
    a relationship with a woman, Tanya Bevins, whose children—Jacob Hayes and
    A-2056-20
    5
    Willimena Hayes—had begun working at the farm in 2016 and were employed
    at the farm at least through the day of Deanna's murder. According to Anthony,
    Bevins knew he kept money in the home's kitchen cabinets because he had given
    her money from the cabinets during their relationship. Detectives learned that
    Dralle was Willimena's boyfriend and often drove Jacob and Willimena to and
    from work at the farm. The police later interviewed Jacob multiple times, and
    Willimena and Bevins as well, but determined they had not provided any
    information resulting in helpful investigative leads.
    On July 2 and 5, 2017, police spoke to Aliyah Saud, who reported that at
    a recent time—on a date that could have been Sunday, June 25, 2017, the date
    of Deanna's murder—she was in Dralle's car with Dralle, Jacob, Willimena, and
    a man named "Pat." Saud stated that between 8:00 and 9:00 p.m. Dralle had
    driven her and the other occupants to a house she believed was "Pat's." She
    explained that the three males, Dralle, Jacob, and Pat, had exited the car, Dralle
    went into the house and returned to the car with a white bag that contained what
    "looked to" her were papers and sneakers. She was told that what was in the
    bag was "life threatening" and needed to be burned quickly. Saud also informed
    police that Jacob had told her he had shot and killed Deanna.
    A-2056-20
    6
    Police also interviewed Dralle's friend, Patrick Manganaro, who stated
    that on June 25, 2017, he was in a car with Dralle, Jacob, Willimena, and
    Willimena's female friend whom he did not know, and they went to his house
    where they had a bonfire in a fire pit. At trial, Manganaro testified he had gone
    into his house alone and, when he later exited, he saw bags in the bonfire but
    did not know who had put them there.
    On July 3, 2017, detectives interviewed Dralle at the Winslow Township
    police headquarters. Dralle explained that he had been to the Scordo farm
    several times because he had driven his girlfriend Willimena and her brother
    Jacob to and from work at the farm in his 2014 charcoal-gray Dodge Dart.
    Dralle stated that on June 24—the day prior to the murder—he had driven
    Jacob and Willimena to work and then played basketball with his friend
    Manganaro. Dralle said that at about 3:00 p.m. he went home and played video
    games and was "chilling with [his] sister." Dralle stated that he did not go out
    at all that night. He denied knowing anything about what had happened to
    Deanna and denied burning a bag.
    On July 20, 2017, police interviewed Dralle's friend Michael Barner.
    Initially, Barner denied being at the Scordo residence on June 25, 2017, and told
    police that Dralle had confessed to him that he had been there. In another
    A-2056-20
    7
    statement he made on August 2, 2017, Barner told police that he been the driver
    of the car involved in the Scordo murder, but that Dralle was not there at all.
    Barner also told the police that he had seen Benjamin at a gas station
    earlier in the day on June 24, 2017, and that Benjamin offered him $200 to $300
    to give him a ride to a friend's house that night. According to Barner, when he
    got to Benjamin's house, Benjamin and one other person—not Dralle—got in
    the car and he drove them to the Scordo house. According to his statement to
    the police, Barner said he had heard gun shots at the house and, in response,
    drove away and left Benjamin and the other person at the house.
    At the State's request, the court granted Barner use- and derivative-use
    immunity for his testimony at trial. Barner testified that on June 24, 2017, the
    day before the murder, he saw Benjamin who had asked if Barner would later
    drive him to a friend's house and had told Barner he would pay him to do so.
    Barner agreed and later spoke with Dralle, who said providing Benjamin with
    the requested ride was something they—Barner and Dralle—should do.
    Barner testified that he then picked up Dralle and they went to Benjamin's
    residence to pick him up.     According to Barner, when they arrived at the
    residence, Benjamin and another individual entered the vehicle, and Benjamin
    A-2056-20
    8
    placed a gun to the back of Barner's head and told him to take them "where they
    needed to go, and not tell anyone."
    Dralle directed Barner to drive to a home in Winslow Township that, as it
    turned out, was the Scordo residence. Barner testified that when they arrived at
    the home, the three passengers—Dralle, Benjamin, and the other man—were
    clad in black hoodies and exited the vehicle and ran to the back of the house.
    About fifteen to twenty minutes later, from his vantage point in the vehicle,
    Barner saw a second-floor bedroom light in the house turn on, heard a sound
    "like a shriek," and then heard "gunshots shortly after." Barner testified Dralle,
    Benjamin, and the other man then returned to the car, with Dralle and Benjamin
    carrying long guns, and Benjamin had "a bag that he wore."
    Barner testified he then drove Benjamin and the other man back to
    Benjamin's residence, where Benjamin exited with the two long guns and the
    bag. Barner then dropped off Dralle at his residence and returned home.
    Barner identified a photograph of the Scordo home. He also described
    and identified on a photograph where he had parked his car while waiting for
    Dralle, Benjamin, and the other man to return from the Scordo house. He
    pointed out the second-floor window where he had seen the light on prior to
    hearing the shriek and the gunshots. Other evidence presented established that
    A-2056-20
    9
    the window he identified was in the bedroom in which Deanna had been shot
    and killed.
    On cross-examination at trial, Barner testified he had lied in his initial
    statements to the police because he was scared and had tried to protect his friend,
    Dralle. Barner further acknowledged that on the evening of June 24, 2017, he
    had several phone calls with an individual identified as Dondre Benjamin, and
    two additional phone calls with Dondre at around 4:30 a.m. on June 25, 2017. 2
    He also conceded that following Deanna's murder, he had conducted searches
    on the internet for "conspiracy to commit murder," "full immunity and means,"
    and information on criminal defense attorneys.
    Police also spoke with Loveuan Scott, who lived with Benjamin and
    Dondre, and is related to Benjamin through marriage. On July 19, 2017, while
    Scott was in custody on traffic warrants, he provided a video-recorded statement
    to police. During the statement, Scott said he had seen Dralle the previous day
    and Dralle had told him that police were looking for Benjamin and Dondre.
    Scott reported that during June 2017, he had heard that "Benjamin is the
    one that did the bull shit," and he asked Benjamin what he had done. According
    to Scott, Benjamin said he had gone in the house and the "girl that died . . . did
    2
    During trial, Benjamin was identified as Dondre's older brother.
    A-2056-20
    10
    some shit," and that he "had the gun," he "pulled the trigger," and "he had to do
    it." Scott also reported that Benjamin had said he got cash, "either twenty-three
    or thirteen" hundred and he had given Dondre $200.
    Scott also stated that Benjamin had bought clothes and a "bunch of dumb
    shit" from the "[d]iamond store" at a mall and that Dondre had "FaceTim[ed]"
    him "flashing a lot of money" when he and Benjamin were at the mall. Scott
    also saw "quarter wraps" for rolling coins on the floor of their house "around the
    time . . . the shit first happened."
    At trial, Scott testified in a manner inconsistent with the statement he had
    given police and otherwise disavowed the statements he had made to the police.
    The court admitted his recorded statement to the police as a prior inconsistent
    statement.
    Police searched defendants' cell phones.        Sergeant Chris Robinson,
    Commander of the Camden County Prosecutor's Office's High Tech Crimes
    Unit, testified about the Unit's use of Cellebrite software to extract information
    from cell phones. Another detective, who was unavailable at trial, had extracted
    information from Dralle's phone using Cellebrite and had generated an
    extraction report, which Robinson reviewed and testified had confirmed the
    extraction had been performed accurately. Detective Timothy Houck, who was
    A-2056-20
    11
    also employed in the High Tech Crimes Unit, testified that he had performed a
    Cellebrite extraction of Benjamin's phone, as well as an extraction using Axiom
    software. Houck also used Cellebrite and Axiom to perform an extraction on
    Dralle's cell phone.
    Prosecutor's Office Detective Matthew Barber testified that the extraction
    of data from Dralle's phone for the period June 24 to 11:00 p.m. on June 25,
    2017, demonstrated that Dralle had communicated with Willimena, Dondre,
    Barner and "Young Dom." During cross-examination by Benjamin's defense
    counsel, Detective Barber conceded that there were fourteen text messages
    between Dralle and Dondre from June 23 to June 25, 2017, and fifteen calls or
    attempted calls between them on June 24. A deleted message from Dralle to
    Dondre on June 23 states "what do you think for TN it's a go." Dralle then texted
    Dondre, "everything smooth" and Dondre responded, "yeah we just got to get
    Mike wheels." Dralle replied with a smiley face emoji and later wrote "life-
    changing." On June 24, Dralle texted Dondre, "we never seen money like this"
    and "but I'll see you tonight."
    At 8:15:04 a.m. on June 25, five hours after Deanna's murder, Dralle
    received a text from "Pops" asking him where he was going, and he replied,
    "ShopRite." Later that day, Pops texted Dralle asking about a black hoodie on
    A-2056-20
    12
    the "back deck." Dralle responded, "it's mine." The search history on Dralle's
    phone revealed searches on June 25 and 26, 2017, that were deleted, for ".357
    Sig." ".357 Magnum revolver" and ".357 rifle."
    The extraction report of Benjamin's phone showed numerous searches of
    news sites from June 26 to 28, 2017. On June 28, the report showed searches
    for "New Jersey multiple head shots," "one injured in home invasion," "one
    injured in Hammonton, New Jersey," and "woman injured in Hammonton, New
    Jersey." There was a web search titled "Winslow woman gunned down at her
    home" and the date associated with the news article was June 25, 2017, at which
    time, as Detective Barber testified, only "very general ideas or very general
    details" about the murder had been released to the media. Also found on
    Benjamin's phone were various videos and photos showing him and Dondre with
    cash, including $100 bills and $20 bills, and at the Hamilton Mall.
    Police searched Dralle's 2014 Dodge Dart pursuant to a warrant. In the
    car, police found a receipt for $90.78 from a Coinstar machine located at a
    ShopRite supermarket in Vineland. The receipt bore a date and time of June 25,
    2017, at 8:27 a.m., hours after the murder. Dralle's fingerprints were found on
    the receipt. Police obtained surveillance video footage from the ShopRite from
    the date and time of the receipt, which showed a "gray car" pulling up to the
    A-2056-20
    13
    store and parking, and a person using the Coinstar machine whom the State
    asserted was Dralle.
    Detectives also searched the Mays Landing home where Benjamin had
    been staying with Scott.     They collected from a hallway closet an H&M
    shopping bag containing Footlocker and H&M receipts from the Hamilton Mall;
    a Verizon bag that had an Apple iPhone 5s box with a GoWireless receipt; and
    a Footlocker bag that contained an empty jewelry box and a black plastic bag
    containing another jewelry box, business cards and two receipts from Diamonds
    Forever. The receipts were dated from June 25 and 26, 2017. The GoWireless
    receipt stated was billed to Benjamin, and that he had paid $267.18 in cash.
    Benjamin's fingerprints were found on the iPhone box and the black plastic bag.
    The jury convicted defendants on all the charges. The court sentenced
    Benjamin to an aggregate prison term of thirty-eight years with an eighty-five-
    percent period of parole ineligibility and a five-year period of parole supervision
    under the No Early Release Act, N.J.S.A. 2C:43-7.2 (NERA). On count one,
    second-degree unlawful possession of a handgun, the court imposed a seven-
    year term with a three-and-one-half-year period of parole ineligibility, under the
    Graves Act, N.J.S.A. 2C:43-6(c). The court merged count two, second-degree
    possession of a handgun for an unlawful purpose, into count five, first -degree
    A-2056-20
    14
    armed robbery, and merged count three, conspiracy, into counts four and six,
    second-degree burglary and felony murder. On count four, charging burglary,
    the court imposed a concurrent term of seven years with an eighty-five percent
    period of parole ineligibility under NERA, and a three-year period of parole
    supervision. On count five, charging robbery, the court imposed a concurrent
    term of fourteen years subject to the requirements of NERA. The court merged
    count six, charging felony murder, with count seven, charging murder, and
    imposed a concurrent term of thirty-eight-years subject to the requirements of
    NERA.
    The court imposed the same sentences on Dralle on counts one, four and
    five, and made the identical merger decisions as to counts two, three and six.
    For Dralle's murder conviction, the court imposed a term of forty years subject
    to NERA's requirements. These appeals followed.
    In A-2056-20, Benjamin offers the following arguments:
    POINT I
    DEFENDANT WAS DENIED HIS RIGHTS TO A
    FAIR AND IMPARTIAL JURY BY THE TRIAL
    COURT'S ERRONEOUS DENIAL OF TWO JURY
    CHALLENGES FOR CAUSE, WHICH LED TO THE
    IMPANELING OF A JUROR WHO WOULD HAVE
    BEEN STRUCK BY THE DEFENSE HAD THE
    DEFENSE NOT BEEN FORCED TO EXHAUST ITS
    PEREMPTORY CHALLENGES.
    A-2056-20
    15
    POINT II
    THE TRIAL COURT'S IMPROPER HANDLING OF
    THE JURY'S REQUEST TO HEAR A READBACK
    OF TESTIMONY FROM THE TWO MOST
    IMPORTANT WITNESSES IN THE CASE DENIED
    DEFENDANT DUE PROCESS AND A FAIR TRIAL.
    POINT III
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN DENYING
    DEFENDANT'S MOTION FOR A MISTRIAL
    WHERE THE COURT ERRONEOUSLY INFORMED
    THE JURY THAT SCOTT INVOKED HIS FIFTH
    AMENDMENT PRIVILEGE, LEAVING THE JURY
    WITH THE UNCORRECTED IMPRESSION THAT
    SCOTT FEARED CRIMINAL LIABILITY DUE TO
    HIS ASSOCIATION WITH DEFENDANT.
    POINT IV
    A THIRTY-EIGHT-YEAR NERA SENTENCE FOR
    THIS SEVENTEEN-YEAR-OLD DEFENDANT IS
    UNDULY PUNITIVE, MANIFESTLY EXCESSIVE,
    AND SHOULD BE REDUCED.
    In A-2511-20, Dralle advances the following arguments:
    POINT I
    THE TRIAL COURT'S INTERFERENCE WITH
    JURY    DELIBERATIONS    CONSTITUTES
    REVERSIBLE ERROR.
    A-2056-20
    16
    POINT II
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY FAILING TO
    INQUIRE FURTHER AS TO THE JURY QUESTION
    TO SUBSTITUTE A SITTING JUROR WITH AN
    ALTERNATE JUROR.
    POINT III
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY DENYING
    DEFENDANT'S MOTION TO SUPPRESS THE
    EVIDENCE SEIZED AS A RESULT OF THE
    EXECUTION OF A WARRANT FOR THE
    DEFENDANT'S CAR.
    POINT IV
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY REFUSING TO
    GRANT A MISTRIAL.
    POINT V
    THE TRIAL COURT ERRED BY NOT SEVERING
    THE DEFENDANT'S TRIAL FROM THAT OF
    CODEFENDANT BENJAMIN[.]
    POINT VI
    THE PROSECUTOR COMMITTED MISCONDUCT
    DURING    HIS    SUMMATION     THEREBY
    DEPRIVING THE DEFENDANT OF A FAIR TRIAL
    REQUIRING REVERSAL OF HIS CONVICTION.
    POINT VII
    THE TRIAL COURT ABUSED ITS DISCRETION BY
    ALLOWING LAY TESTIMONY AS TO THE CELL
    A-2056-20
    17
    PHONE EXTRACTIONS USING CELLEBRITE
    WITHOUT CONDUCTING A FRYE[3] HEARING.
    POINT VIII
    THE TRIAL COURT'S JURY INSTRUCTIONS
    WERE DEFICIENT, DENYING DEFENDANT A
    FAIR TRIAL.
    POINT IX
    DEFENDANT IS ENTITLED TO A NEW TRIAL
    DUE TO CUMULATIVE ERROR.
    POINT X
    DEFENDANT'S SENTENCE IS EXCESSIVE.
    Prior to addressing defendants' arguments, many of which are asserted for
    the first time on appeal, we note that we first consider the arguments concerning
    the court's disposition of pretrial motions, then address the court's alleged trial
    errors, and conclude with our analysis of defendants' respective challenges to
    their sentences.
    II.
    Dralle challenges the court's denial of two pretrial motions. Dralle argues
    the court erred by denying his motion to suppress evidence—a receipt—seized
    from his vehicle and also the evidence—a video recording—derived from the
    3
    Frye v. United States, 
    293 F. 1013
    , 1014 (D.C. Cir. 1923).
    A-2056-20
    18
    receipt. Dralle also argues the court erred in denying a motion he never made:
    Benjamin's motion for severance of his trial from Dralle's.4 We consider Dralle's
    arguments in turn.
    Dralle's Motion to Suppress Evidence
    The police obtained a search warrant for Dralle's car and, during the
    subsequent search pursuant to the warrant, found a receipt from a coin cashing
    machine at a ShopRite supermarket showing that hours after Deanna 's murder
    and the perpetrators' theft of $276 in rolled coins from the Scordo home, $90.78
    in coins had been converted to cash. It was later determined Dralle's fingerprints
    were on the receipt and a surveillance recording from the supermarket showed
    a "gray" car parking at the store and a person who had exited the vehicle using
    the coin machine. The State argued Dralle was the individual who had exited
    the vehicle and used the coin machine at the time—8:27 a.m. on June 25, 2017—
    listed on the receipt.
    The application for the warrant authorizing the search of Dralle's car was
    supported by an affidavit by Camden County Prosecutor's Office Detective
    Jason A. Rowello. The affidavit states in pertinent part that a juvenile, later
    identified as Saud, had informed the police that at approximately 6:00 p.m. on
    4
    Benjamin does not argue the court erred by denying his severance motion.
    A-2056-20
    19
    June 25, 2017, she was in a black vehicle that had been identified as a 2014
    Dodge Dart bearing a specified vehicle identification number (VIN). Saud also
    had reported that at that time she had been in the car with Dralle, Willimena,
    Jacob, and a man she identified as "Pat."
    According to Detective Rowello's affidavit, Saud reported that the vehicle
    had been driven to a home in Buena Township and, after arriving there, Dralle,
    Jacob, and Pat, exited the vehicle and went into the home before returning to the
    vehicle with a white trash bag that appeared to contain footwear and papers.
    Detective Rowello further represented that the "bag was later described by Jacob
    as containing items of 'life or death' importance that were related to" Deanna's
    murder.
    Detective Rowello also stated in his affidavit that Saud had reported that
    after Dralle, Jacob, and Pat re-entered the vehicle, it was driven to a separate
    residence where Jacob told Saud that "he had to wrestle with the female decedent
    at which time he shot her," and that he was upset because he knew the decedent 's
    family. In the affidavit, Detective Rowello explained Saud had reported that
    once at the second address, the white "bag and its contents were . . . burned
    while" Saud "remained in the vehicle."
    A-2056-20
    20
    Detective Rowello also stated that based on those facts it was believed the
    black vehicle with the specified VIN contained evidence of the homicide. The
    detective further explained that based on the vehicle's VIN, it had been
    determined the vehicle was equipped with an Infotainment System, which is a
    device physically located in the vehicle that provides GPS information,
    communications data and evidence concerning the devices used by the vehicle's
    operator and occupants that would aid in the investigation of the murder.
    The court denied Dralle's suppression motion, finding the affidavit's facts
    established probable cause for the vehicle search and rejecting Dralle's claim the
    affidavit's reliance on hearsay rendered the resulting warrant invalid. The court
    found it was reasonable to conclude that the vehicle contained evidence related
    to the murder because the affidavit established grounds to believe the vehicle
    had been used to transport evidence related to the crimes committed at the
    Scordo home.     The court also rejected Dralle's assertion that the affidavit
    contained "material misrepresentations," noting that Dralle had failed to
    demonstrate the affiant had "deliberately lied or recklessly disregarded the truth"
    concerning any facts material to a probable-cause determination.
    Dralle argues the court erred by denying his motion to suppress the
    evidence—the receipt—seized from the vehicle pursuant to the warrant issued
    A-2056-20
    21
    based on Detective Rowello's affidavit. He contends the court erred by relying
    on the information provided by Saud because she acted as a confidential
    informant and the affidavit did not include any facts establishing her reliability.
    Dralle also claims the search-warrant affidavit did not establish probable cause
    because it was based on hearsay and Detective Rowello lacked personal
    knowledge of the information in the affidavit because he was not one of the
    officers investigating Deanna's murder. Dralle further contends the affidavit did
    not establish a sufficient nexus between the vehicle and the murder to support
    probable cause for the search. Dralle last contends that the court should have
    conducted an evidentiary hearing before deciding the suppression motion.
    In our review of an order denying a suppression motion, we defer to the
    court's factual findings that are supported by sufficient credible evidence and
    review its legal findings de novo. State v. Gamble, 
    218 N.J. 412
    , 424-25 (2014).
    Applying that standard, we find no error in the court's denial of Dralle's motion.
    "A search that is executed pursuant to a warrant is 'presumptively valid,'
    and a defendant challenging the issuance of that warrant has the burden of proof
    to establish a lack of probable cause 'or that the search was otherwise
    unreasonable.'" State v. Boone, 
    232 N.J. 417
    , 427 (2017) (quoting State v.
    Watts, 
    223 N.J. 501
    , 513-14 (2015)).          We therefore "accord substantial
    A-2056-20
    22
    deference to the discretionary determination resulting in the issuance of the
    [search] warrant[,]" 
    ibid.
     (quoting State v. Jones, 
    179 N.J. 377
    , 388 (2004)), and
    evaluate only whether the application "provided sufficient evidence for [a]
    finding of probable cause to search the premises for the items authorized[,]"
    State v. Chippero, 
    201 N.J. 14
    , 32 (2009). By extension, a search warrant "must
    be supported by substantial evidence that the items sought are in fact seizable
    by virtue of being connected with criminal activity, and that the items will be
    found in the place to be searched." Boone, 
    232 N.J. at 427
     (quoting Chippero,
    
    201 N.J. at 28
    ).
    "New Jersey has adopted a totality-of-the-circumstances test to determine
    whether warrants are based on probable cause." State v. Gathers, 
    234 N.J. 208
    ,
    221 (2018). Probable cause exists where the facts and circumstances within an
    officer's "knowedge . . . [are] sufficient in themselves to warrant a [person] of
    reasonable caution in the belief that an offense has been or is committed." State
    v. Moore, 
    181 N.J. 40
    , 46 (2004) (alterations in original) (quoting Schneider
    v.Simonini, 
    163 N.J. 336
    , 361 (2000)). "[T]he probable cause determination
    must be . . . based on the information contained within the four corners of the
    supporting affidavit, as supplemented by sworn testimony before the issuing
    A-2056-20
    23
    judge that is recorded contemporaneously." 5 Boone, 
    232 N.J. at 427
     (quoting
    State v. Marshall, 
    199 N.J. 602
    , 611 (2009)).
    Additionally, "[t]here is no requirement that a warrant affidavit fully
    describe all steps taken, all information obtained, and all statements made by
    witnesses during the course of an investigation," State v. Smith, 
    212 N.J. 365
    ,
    398-99 (2012); see also State v. Kasabucki, 
    52 N.J. 110
    , 120 (1968) ("The
    affidavits presented to the court on the application should not be examined with
    a hypertechnical eye."). The facts in a warrant affidavit "should not be reviewed
    from the vantage point of twenty-twenty hindsight by interpreting the supporting
    affidavit in a hypertechnical, rather than a commonsense manner." State v.
    Sheehan, 
    217 N.J. Super. 20
    , 27 (App. Div. 1987). And "when the adequacy of
    the facts offered to show probable cause . . . appears to be marginal, the doubt
    should ordinarily be resolved by sustaining the search" on appeal. Kasabucki,
    
    52 N.J. at 116
    .
    Measured against these principles, we find no error in the court's issuance
    of the warrant or in the motion court's rejection of Dralle's challenge to it. The
    information contained in the four corners of the affidavit explains that Saud had
    5
    The record does include any evidence establishing that Detective Rowello
    supplemented the warrant affidavit with testimony before the judge who issued
    the search warrant.
    A-2056-20
    24
    informed the police that on the same day as Deanna's murder, she was in a black
    vehicle with Dralle, Jacob, Willimena, and Pat that the police had later identified
    with a specified VIN.
    As explained in the affidavit, Saud had reported that while in the vehicle,
    Jacob stated he had shot Deanna and that the items in the bag were "items of
    'life or death' importance and were related to" the murder. Saud had also
    reported the items in the bag had been transported to a different location and had
    been burned. The affidavit further explained that based on information gleaned
    from an investigation, it had been determined the vehicle contained a computer
    system that would provide information, including GPS data, that would allow a
    determination as to the places the vehicle had traveled.
    In our view, the affidavit included sufficient facts supporting a reasonable
    belief the specified vehicle contained evidence related to Deanna's murder and
    the other crimes committed at the Scordo home. Kasabucki, 
    52 N.J. at 116
    . The
    information provided by Saud supported a reasonable belief evidence related to
    the murder had been obtained from one residence and was then transported in
    the bag in the vehicle to another residence where it was burned. Indeed, Saud
    had reported that Jacob admitted as much. Moreover, the affidavit established
    a reasonable basis to conclude the vehicle's Infotainment system might provide
    A-2056-20
    25
    evidence concerning the timing of the movement of evidence related to the
    murder, the places where the evidence had been located and was reportedly
    destroyed, and data concerning communications made by the vehicle's
    occupants. Boone, 
    232 N.J. at 427
    .
    Dralle argues that Saud's statements "did not establish" that the vehicle
    was his car. However, the warrant affidavit does not describe the vehicle as
    Dralle's vehicle. It identifies the vehicle by its VIN and explains that the vehicle
    had been identified as having the listed VIN.
    Dralle also argues the information contained in the warrant affidavit was
    provided by Saud who "acted more as a confidential informant than as a truly
    concerned citizen," and therefore the information required independent
    corroboration by the police. Dralle contends that Saud's statements to police
    prior to the search-warrant application were vague and nonspecific and did not
    support the statements made in the warrant affidavit and therefore required that
    the court hold an evidentiary hearing to determine their truthfulness.
    "Our courts have distinguished between an identifiable citizen, who is
    presumed to be reliable, and an anonymous informer whose reliability must be
    established." State v. Basil, 
    202 N.J. 570
    , 586 (2010); see also State v. Keyes,
    
    184 N.J. 541
    , 556 (2005) (finding statements made by informants require
    A-2056-20
    26
    "independent police corroboration" to establish their reliability).           Thus,
    "information imparted by a citizen directly to a police officer will receive greater
    weight than information received from an anonymous tipster" and "an
    objectively reasonable police officer may assume that an ordinary citizen
    reporting a crime, which the citizen purports to have observed, is providing
    reliable information." 
    Ibid.
     When the hearsay contained in a search-warrant
    application comes from statements made by a criminal or an anonymous
    informant, "thorough scrutiny of the informant's veracity and basis of knowledge
    in the context of the totality of the facts contained in the officer 's showing of
    probable cause" is required. State v. Novembrino, 
    105 N.J. 95
    , 123 (1987)
    (citing Illinois v. Gates, 
    462 U.S. 213
    , 238-39 (1983)).
    The court properly relied on Saud's statements, as reported by Detective
    Rowello, in making its probable-cause determination for the search warrant.
    Dralle's claim Saud acted as a confidential informant is bereft of support in the
    record.   Dralle alleges the police must have engaged in off-the-record
    conversations with Saud and the police must have "intended to help her out,"
    but the claim is based on speculation untethered to any evidence. There is also
    no evidence Saud's communications with police were motivated by personal
    gain, thereby requiring independent corroboration of her statements before they
    A-2056-20
    27
    could serve as an adequate basis for issuance of the warrant. See Keyes, 
    184 N.J. at 556
    .
    Probable cause for a warrant may be established by statements, including
    hearsay statements, see Gathers, 
    234 N.J. at 221
    , made by citizen-informants,
    because unlike criminal-informants or anonymous informants, a concerned
    citizen "does not expect any gain or concession in exchange for his [or her]
    information," Widoner v. Borough of Ramsey, 
    162 N.J. 375
    , 391 (2000)
    (quoting State v. Lakomy, 
    126 N.J. Super. 430
    , 435 (App. Div. 1974)), but rather
    is "motivated by factors which are consistent with law enforcement goals[,]"
    
    ibid.
     (quoting Sanducci v. City of Hoboken, 
    315 N.J. Super. 475
    , 482 (1998)).
    That is what occurred here. Saud reported to the police that Jacob had stated he
    was involved in the murder and that the vehicle Dralle had driven contained
    evidence, later burned, related to the murder. That information supported the
    court's determination there was probable cause to search the vehicle.       See
    Novembrino, 105 N.J. at 110 (noting the "entrenched principle" that "hearsay
    alone can provide a sufficient basis for [a] warrant").
    Moreover, the information provided by Saud included facts that
    established an "appearance of trustworthiness," State v. DiRienzo, 
    53 N.J. 360
    ,
    385 (1969), of the information she had provided. The affidavit states that Saud
    A-2056-20
    28
    admitted she had been an eyewitness to the transport of evidence related to the
    murder and the details she provided, including her report of the statements made
    by Jacob, are consistent with other information included in the affidavit. For
    example, the affidavit notes the police investigation revealed that Deanna had
    been shot, and Saud reported that Jacob admitted he had shot her. In sum, Saud's
    statements were sufficiently trustworthy to establish an adequate nexus between
    the vehicle and evidence of the crimes committed at the Scordo home.
    Dralle also argues the search-warrant affidavit was inadequate because
    Detective Rowello "had no connection to the investigation of the murder" and
    therefore could not attest to the accuracy of the "personal information of the
    facts" in the affidavit. In evaluating an affidavit for a search warrant, probable
    cause often arises from "'the total atmosphere of the case'" based upon "the
    affiant's personal knowledge, or information received from other law
    enforcement officers or reliable informers[.]" State v. Tanzola, 
    83 N.J. Super. 40
    , 46 (App. Div. 1964) (quoting United States v. Bell, 
    126 F. Supp. 612
    , 615
    (D.D.C. 1995)).
    Detective Rowello was assigned to the Homicide Unit of the Camden
    County Prosecutor's Office—the same unit primarily responsible for
    investigating the murder. In his affidavit, Detective Rowello described his
    A-2056-20
    29
    employment with the unit and explained he was responsible for the investigation
    of the murder and had otherwise "conducted and assisted in numerous
    investigations" for the unit.    We are satisfied the detective established a
    sufficient basis for his knowledge of the facts in the affidavit—that of an officer,
    involved in the investigation and within the unit primarily handling the same
    investigation—to adequately provide a basis for the judge's finding of probable
    cause for the search warrant. Ibid.; see Gathers, 
    234 N.J. at 223
     (finding an
    "affidavit from a police officer familiar with the investigation" is the preferred
    means of support for an application seeking a buccal swab of the defendant).
    Dralle also argues he was entitled to a Franks6 hearing, claiming Detective
    Rowello had falsely stated in his affidavit that the Dodge vehicle was "black"
    and otherwise omitted material facts which, if included in the affidavit, "would
    have caused the issuing judge to refuse to sign the warrant."              We are
    unpersuaded.
    A Franks hearing is required "where the defendant makes a substantial
    preliminary showing that a false statement knowingly and intentionally, or with
    reckless disregard for the truth, was included by the affiant in the warrant
    affidavit, and if the allegedly false statement is necessary to the finding of
    6
    Franks v. Delaware, 
    438 U.S. 154
     (1978).
    A-2056-20
    30
    probable cause." 438 U.S. at 155-56. A defendant seeking a Franks hearing
    "must allege 'deliberate falsehood or reckless disregard for the truth,' pointing
    out with specificity the portions of the warrant that are claimed to be untrue."
    State v. Howery, 
    80 N.J. 563
    , 567 (1979) (quoting Franks, 438 U.S. at 171). To
    obtain a Franks hearing, a defendant must support his or her allegations with
    affidavits or other reliable statements because "[a]llegations of negligence or
    innocent mistake are insufficient." State v. Broom-Smith, 
    406 N.J. Super. 228
    ,
    241 (App. Div. 2009) (quoting Franks, 438 U.S. at 171).
    A defendant must also demonstrate that absent the alleged false
    statements, the search warrant lacks sufficient facts to establish probable cause.
    Howery, 80 N.J. at 568. If a search-warrant affidavit contains sufficient facts
    establishing probable cause even after the alleged false statements are excised,
    a Franks hearing is not required. Franks, 438 U.S. at 171-72.
    A misstatement is considered material if, when excised, the warrant
    affidavit "no longer contains facts sufficient to establish probable cause" in its
    absence. Howery, 80 N.J. at 568 (citing Franks, 438 U.S. at 171). "If at such
    inquiry the defendant proves [a] falsity by a preponderance of the evidence, the
    warrant is invalid and the evidence seized thereby must be suppressed." Id. at
    566; see also Franks, 438 U.S. at 172 (holding "when material that is the subject
    A-2056-20
    31
    of the alleged falsity or reckless disregard is set to one side, there remains
    sufficient content in the warrant affidavit to support a finding of probable cause,
    no hearing is required").
    We reject Dralle's claim Detective Rowello omitted from his affidavit
    facts material to a determination of probable cause for the search. Dralle does
    not identify any such facts. See Howery, 80 N.J. at 567. We also reject Dralle's
    claim the affidavit included a material misstatement of fact—allegedly that the
    Dodge vehicle was black—based on his claim that his vehicle was gray. Even
    accepting that the vehicle was gray and not black, the color of the car was not
    material to the probable-cause determination. The vehicle in which Saud stated
    she had been driven was otherwise identified by its VIN number and, as a result,
    the vehicle's color was not a fact material to the probable-cause determination
    required for the warrant.
    As we have explained, where probable cause exists despite what is
    claimed to be errant information in a search-warrant affidavit, the search warrant
    remains valid and a Franks hearing is not required. Sheehan, 
    217 N.J. Super. at 25
    . Dralle offers no evidence the alleged misstatement about the color of the
    vehicle—or any other alleged omission in the warrant affidavit pertaining to
    Saud's statements to the police—was deliberately false or "made in reckless
    A-2056-20
    32
    disregard of the truth" such that he was entitled an evidentiary hearing. Howery,
    80 N.J. at 567; Broom-Smith, 
    406 N.J. Super. at 240
     (noting "a Franks hearing
    is not directed at picking apart minor technical problems with a warrant
    application; it is aimed at warrants obtained through intentional wrongdoing by
    law enforcement agents"). The motion court therefore correctly determined
    Dralle had not demonstrated an entitlement to a Franks hearing and properly
    denied his suppression motion as to the evidence seized from the vehicle and the
    derivative evidence—the video recordings—subsequently seized from the
    supermarket.
    Dralle's Claim The Court Erred By Denying Benjamin's Severance Motion
    As noted, Dralle did not move to sever his trial from Benjamin's and he
    did not join in Benjamin's severance motion. Nonetheless, and having never
    requested severance from the trial court, Dralle argues for the first time on
    appeal he was entitled to severance and the court erred by denying Benjamin 's
    severance motion because defendants presented antagonistic defenses.
    In the first instance, we reject Dralle's claim because it was not made
    before the trial court and does not "go to the jurisdiction of the trial court or
    concern matters of great public interest." State v. Robinson, 
    200 N.J. 1
    , 20
    (2009) (quoting Nieder v. Royal Indem. Ins. Co., 
    62 N.J. 229
    , 234 (1973)).
    A-2056-20
    33
    Dralle's failure to move for severance based on the arguments he makes for the
    first time on appeal "denied the trial court the opportunity to evaluate the claim
    in an informed and deliberate manner" and deprives this court of "the benefit of
    a robust record within which [his particular] claim[s] could be considered." Id.
    at 21. For those reasons alone, we reject Dralle's claim he was entitled to a
    severance he did not request the court grant in the first instance.
    Nonetheless, for purposes of completeness, we consider and reject Dralle's
    newly-minted claim that he was entitled to severance of his trial from
    Benjamin's. We consider the argument under the plain-error standard and will
    reverse his conviction only if the court made an error "clearly capable of
    producing an unjust result." State v. Burns, 
    192 N.J. 312
    , 341 (2007) (citing R.
    2:10-2); see also State v. Singh, 
    245 N.J. 1
    , 13 (2021) (explaining "[w]hen a
    defendant does not object to an alleged error at trial, such error is reviewed under
    the plain error standard").
    "'The test for granting severance . . . is a rigorous one,'" State v. Brown,
    
    170 N.J. 138
    , 160 (2001) (quoting State v. Brown, 
    118 N.J. 595
    , 605-06(1990)),
    under which the court "must balance the potential prejudice to a defendant
    against the interest in judicial economy," 
    ibid.
     As a rule, "[j]ointly indicted
    defendants generally should be tried together to avoid unnecessary, duplicative
    A-2056-20
    34
    litigation[,]" State v. Sanchez, 
    143 N.J. 273
    , 281-82 (1996), because often in
    those instances, "the crimes charged arise from the same series of acts" and
    "much of the same evidence is needed to prosecute each defendant[,]" Brown,
    
    118 N.J. at 605
    ; see also State v. Gaskin, 
    325 N.J. Super. 563
    , 575 (App. Div.
    1999) ("The joint trial creates efficiency in the judicial process, is convenient to
    witnesses and victims, avoids inconsistent verdicts, and is more accurate in the
    assessment of relative culpability.").
    A separate trial is required when codefendants' defenses are "antagonistic
    and mutually exclusive or irreconcilable."      Brown, 
    118 N.J. at 605
    . More
    particularly, "[s]eparate trials are required only when defendants 'present
    defenses that are antagonistic at their core[,]'" 
    id. at 606
     (quoting United States
    v. Berkowitz, 
    662 F.2d 1127
    , 1134 (5th Cir. 1981)), and "[t]he mere existence
    of hostility, conflict, or antagonism between defendants is not enough" to justify
    severance, 
    ibid.
       "'Mutual exclusivity' demands that the jury's universe of
    choices be limited to two: the jury can believe only either one defendant or the
    other." 
    Ibid.
     Stated differently, the State's "theory of the case, and the defenses
    themselves, must force the jury to choose between the defendants' conflicting
    accounts and to find only one defendant guilty[,]" and as such, "[i]f the jury can
    return a verdict against one or both defendants by believing neither, or believing
    A-2056-20
    35
    portions of both, or, indeed, believing both completely, the defenses are not
    mutually exclusive." 
    Ibid.
     Nor does the "fact that one defendant seeks to escape
    conviction by placing guilt on his or her co-defendant" constitute "sufficient
    grounds for severance." 
    Ibid.
    Dralle claims that Benjamin's defense at trial was, in part, to place the
    blame for the murder on Dralle, which Dralle claims directly hindered his own
    defense that he was not present during the murder. We find no merit to the
    argument. Benjamin's attempt to shift guilt onto Dralle—or Dralle's shifting of
    guilt onto Benjamin—does not constitute grounds requiring severance of trials.
    
    Ibid.
    Nor do we otherwise find that defendants should not have been tried
    together based on the existence of mutually exclusive defenses. 
    Ibid.
     Dralle
    argues defendants' defenses were mutually exclusive, and thereby antagonistic,
    by inaccurately claiming that if the jury accepted Benjamin's defense, it would
    have to convict Dralle, or that if the jury accepted Dralle's defense, it would
    have to convict Benjamin. The argument's premise is false. The jury could have
    accepted both Dralle's and Benjamin's version of the events and, on that basis,
    concluded that neither was involved in the murder. And, evidence supporting a
    jury determination that both defendants were not guilty establishes that
    A-2056-20
    36
    defendants' defenses were not mutually exclusive, id. at 607, such that the trial
    court should have sua sponte severed their trials or granted Benjamin's severance
    motion.     We therefore find no plain error in the court's decision to hold
    defendants' trial jointly. R. 2:10-2.
    III.
    We next address defendants' respective and joint claims the court
    committed errors during trial.
    Juror Challenges
    Benjamin asserts he was deprived of his right to a fair trial by the court 's
    denial of his request to excuse two jurors for cause: juror number 739 (juror
    739) and juror number 700 (juror 700). Benjamin argues that as a result of the
    court's denial of his requests to excuse those jurors for cause, he was obliged to
    exhaust his peremptory challenges by excusing those jurors and thus "was
    unable to excuse an impaneled juror who would have been struck by the
    defense."
    "'Trial courts possess considerable discretion in determining the
    qualifications of prospective jurors,' which stems from the 'inability of appellate
    courts to appreciate fully the dynamics of a trial proceeding.'" State v. Simon,
    
    161 N.J. 416
    , 465-66 (1999) (quoting State v. DiFrisco, 
    137 N.J. 434
    , 459
    A-2056-20
    37
    (1994)); see also State v. Papasavvas, 
    163 N.J. 565
    , 595 (2000) (quoting State
    v. Jackson, 
    43 N.J. 148
    , 160 (1964)) ("Voir dire procedures and standards are
    traditionally within the broad discretionary powers vested in the trial court and
    'its exercise of discretion will ordinarily not be disturbed on appeal.'"). As such,
    in our analysis of Benjamin's claim, we determine "only . . . whether 'the overall
    scope and quality of the voir dire was sufficiently thorough and probing to assure
    the selection of an impartial jury.'" State v. Winder, 
    200 N.J. 231
    , 252 (2009)
    (quoting State v. Biegenwald, 
    106 N.J. 13
    , 29 (1987)).
    A prospective juror should be excused for cause if the trial court
    determines, in its "discretion, the juror's beliefs or attitudes would substantially
    interfere with his or her duties." Simon, 161 N.J. at 465 (quoting State v. Harris,
    
    156 N.J. 122
    , 168 n.3 (1998)).         "The party challenging the juror must
    demonstrate that 'the juror's view would prevent or substantially impair the
    performance of that juror's duties in accordance with the court's instructions and
    the juror's oath.'" 
    Ibid.
     (quoting DiFrisco, 137 N.J. at 469; State v. Ramseur,
    
    106 N.J. 123
    , 255 (1987)).
    Where, as here, a defendant argues he was forced to exercise his
    preemptory challenges because the court erred by failing to excuse jurors for
    cause, he "must demonstrate that a [partial] juror" participated in deliberations
    A-2056-20
    38
    "as a result of . . . [his] exhaustion of peremptories." DiFrisco, 137 N.J. at 470.
    To demonstrate that error, the defendant must show:
    (1) that the trial court erred by failing to remove a juror
    for cause; (2) that the juror in question was eliminated
    by the exercise of defendant's peremptory challenge
    and that defendant exhausted his remaining challenges;
    and (3) that at least one of the remaining jurors that sat
    on the jury was a partial juror.
    [Id. at 469.]
    Benjamin challenges the court's refusal to dismiss juror 739 for cause,
    arguing the juror should have been excused because he had previously been a
    crime victim. Benjamin claimed the juror could not perform his duties in an
    unbiased manner and had otherwise purportedly struggled to understand the
    applicable burden of proof. The court rejected the argument, finding the juror
    had "satisfied" the court he understood the burdens of proof and that the juror
    was "truthful" in stating his prior experience as a crime victim "wouldn't have a
    bearing on his ability to be fair and impartial."
    Benjamin also challenges the court's refusal to dismiss juror 700 for cause,
    claiming the juror presented "a deeply held belief that police officers always tell
    the truth" and, as a result, could not be unbiased. The court rejected this
    argument, noting the juror, after additional questioning by the court, "indicated
    A-2056-20
    39
    a willingness to give fair consideration to competing points of view even if one
    of them comes from a police officer."
    We discern no abuse of discretion in the court's determination, following
    its voir dire of the jurors, that they could decide the issues presented fairly and
    impartially and that their beliefs, attitudes, or prior experiences would not
    substantially interfere with their duties. Simon, 161 N.J. at 465. Both jurors
    responded to the court's questions in a manner supporting the court's
    determinations there was no cause to excuse them. Benjamin therefore failed to
    sustain his burden under the DiFrisco standard; he did not establish the court
    had erred by failing to remove either juror for cause. 137 N.J. at 470. For that
    reason alone, we reject Benjamin's claim he is entitled to reversal because the
    court did not excuse the jurors for cause.
    Benjamin's claim also fails under the DiFrisco standard because he does
    point to any evidence establishing that a partial juror remained on the jury due
    to his claimed "forced expenditure of" his peremptory challenges. See ibid. He
    generally argues that if he had not exhausted his peremptory challenges, he
    would have also excused juror number 023 (juror 023). He claims juror 023 was
    partial because she had once applied for jobs with various law enforcement
    A-2056-20
    40
    agencies, including the Camden Police Department, and had been offered a job
    but did not take it because she "had already [obtained] a job in education."
    We find nothing in the juror's responses to the court's voir dire supporting
    a conclusion she was partial and could not serve as a fair juror. Indeed, as a
    general rule, a juror's mere employment, or potential employment, as a law
    enforcement officer does not provide cause to excuse a prospective juror or
    require reversal of a conviction by a jury that includes a member of law
    enforcement. See State v. Reynolds, 
    124 N.J. 559
    , 565 (1991) (explaining
    although "prudence counsels that a court, on request of a defendant in a criminal
    case, should be inclined to excuse a member of the law-enforcement
    community . . . it does not follow that the presence of a member of the law-
    enforcement community on a jury constitutes grounds for reversal"). Here, juror
    023 had never been employed in law enforcement and her responses to the
    court's voir dire provides no support for Benjamin's claim that her prior
    submission of applications for a law enforcement position would "substantially
    interfere with . . . her duties" as a fair and impartial juror. Simon, 161 N.J. at
    464.
    Benjamin failed to sustain his burden under the DiFrisco standard, 137
    N.J. at 469, and we otherwise discern no abuse of the court's discretion in
    A-2056-20
    41
    rejecting Benjamin's for-cause challenges to jurors 739 and 700. The court did
    not err by denying his request to excuse those jurors and, even if it did, Benjamin
    failed to demonstrate the court's alleged error resulted in a jury with a juror who
    he could have properly otherwise excused for cause.
    Scott's Testimony and The Court's Denial of Defendants' Mistrial Motions
    Defendants made motions for a mistrial during Scott's testimony. The
    State had called Scott as a witness and obtained his appearance at trial through
    the execution of a material-witness warrant. See generally N.J.S.A. 2C:104-1
    to -9. During his direct testimony, Scott claimed he did not remember what he
    had said during his July 2017 recorded statement to the police and he otherwise
    disavowed what he had told the police during the statement.             The court
    conducted a Gross hearing outside the jury's presence and determined the
    statement was admissible. 7 The court had excused Scott from the courtroom
    during the hearing.
    7
    A hearing pursuant to State v. Gross, 
    121 N.J. 1
     (1990), is a "hearing that the
    trial court conducts to determine the admissibility of a witness's inconsistent
    out-of-court statement—offered by the party calling that witness—by assessing
    whether the statement is reliable." State v. Greene, 
    242 N.J. 530
    , 540 n.2 (2020).
    Neither Dralle nor Benjamin claims the court erred by determining Scott's initial
    statement to the police was admissible under the Gross standard.
    A-2056-20
    42
    It was late in the day when the hearing concluded, and the court excused
    the jury after the Gross hearing and directed that they return the following day.
    After the jury left the courtroom, the court advised counsel and defendants that
    it had been informed by sheriff's officers that Scott, who was in custody on the
    material witness warrant, had "expressed . . . that he now has some interest in
    seeking an attorney."
    The court addressed Scott outside the jury's presence and asked if he
    would appear for trial the next morning if he was released. Scott assured the
    court he would appear and said he had the ability to pay for an attorney and
    would "figure out" whether to get an attorney by "mak[ing] some calls" once he
    was released. The court ordered Scott's release with a subpoena requiring his
    appearance the following day.
    The next day, Scott appeared for trial and informed the court he obtained
    an attorney who had requested that the court call him. Noting that Scott 's
    attorney had not communicated with the court, the judge explained to Scott that
    an attorney "can't just ask . . . for [the court], in the middle of trial, to call him."
    The court directed that the trial resume with the continuation of the State's direct
    examination of Scott.
    A-2056-20
    43
    Defendants' respective counsel objected to the court's decision to proceed
    in that manner arguing, at least in part, that Scott should have an opportunity to
    consult with counsel about any Fifth Amendment issues prior to continuing his
    testimony. The State argued that Scott had testified the previous day wi thout
    any assertion of a Fifth Amendment privilege, Scott's direct testimony was
    effectively complete because the State did not intend to ask him any additional
    questions, and it was therefore too late for Scott to raise any Fifth Amendment
    claims.
    The court stated the trial would continue with Scott taking the stand as a
    witness, and Scott replied, "[e]ven if it's incriminating myself?" The court
    advised Scott, "what we have to do is move forward. If you have a good faith
    basis to take that position, I suppose you'll say so, and then we'll have to deal
    with" any issues pertaining to self-incrimination "when we get to it." Thus, the
    court left open the issue of Scott's possible assertion of a Fifth Amendment
    privilege pending the continuation of his testimony and any putative assertion
    of the privilege as he testified before the jury.
    The trial continued before the jury. The State did not ask Scott any further
    questions on direct and instead moved the recording of Scott's statement to the
    A-2056-20
    44
    police into evidence and played the recording for the jury. When the recording
    ended, the State advised the court it had no further direct examination for Scott.
    Immediately following completion of Scott's direct testimony, and while
    still in the presence of the jury, the court sua sponte made the following
    statements:
    All right. Let me just note for the record that to the
    extent that this witness, Mr. Scott, has exerted a Fifth
    Amendment privilege, what I've ruled is that—is this:
    I base it on my review of the relevant rules of evidence
    pertaining to the subject. I'm looking specifically at the
    2019 edition of the New Jersey Rules of Evidence
    Edited by Biunno, Weissbard, and Zegas.
    [N.J.R.E.] 503 talks about self-incrimination itself.
    [N.J.R.E.] 502—Rule 502 of evidence talks about the
    definition of an incrimination.
    There are comments after that, and in Comment
    Number 1, after that, the editors note this about this
    exercise of this privilege. They say, "In determining
    whether the matter will directly, under N.J.R.E. 502(a),
    inferentially N.J.R.E. 502(b), or indirectly N.J.R.E.
    502(c) incriminate, there must be reasonable cause on
    the part of the witness to apprehend criminal
    prosecution," citing—I'm omitting citations . . . .
    Benjamin's counsel interrupted the court, objected and, at sidebar and after
    the court excused the jury, moved for a mistrial, arguing it was "inappropriate"
    for the court to refer to Scott's "right to silence" in front of the jury. Dralle's
    A-2056-20
    45
    counsel joined the mistrial motion, and the State opposed it, arguing defendants
    had failed to demonstrate the court's comments prejudiced defendants or
    deprived them of a fair trial.
    The court denied the motion, finding its statements had not "expose[d]
    either defendant to any prejudice." The court also advised counsel it would
    provide the jury with a curative instruction at their request, but Dralle 's and
    Benjamin's respective counsel never requested a curative instruction.
    The trial continued. In response to questions asked during Benjamin 's
    counsel's cross-examination, and without objection, Scott volunteered an
    explanation for his concern about incriminating himself. When asked why he
    had told the police in his recorded statement that Benjamin had made certain
    statements about his involvement in Deanna's murder, Scott testified he was
    "just try[ing] to help [himself] out." He further volunteered that he could have
    testified at trial that what he had told the police during the recorded statement
    "was probably a lie," and the reason he "wanted an attorney to help him not
    incriminate himself" was because he wanted to testify at trial that what he had
    said in the recorded statement was a lie. Stated differently, Scott explained that
    he was concerned about incriminating himself if he testified at trial that he had
    lied in his recorded statement to the police.
    A-2056-20
    46
    Benjamin, in point III of his brief, and Dralle, in point IV of his brief,
    assert the court erred by denying their motions for a mistrial. Benjamin claims
    the court erred by informing the jury that Scott "has exerted [sic] a Fifth
    Amendment privilege." Dralle suggests in part the court had "instruct[ed] the
    jury as to Scott's right to remain silent and his refusal to testify" and claims a
    mistrial was mandated because the court's reference to Scott and the Fifth
    Amendment "left the jury to speculate on how Scott would have testified if there
    had not been this issue." Defendants also claim the court's purported errors were
    never cured by a jury instruction. Defendants accordingly assert the court 's
    comments concerning Scott deprived them of their right to a fair trial and the
    court therefore erred by denying their mistrial motions.
    We review the court's decision to deny a motion for a mistrial for an abuse
    of discretion. See State v. Herbert, 
    457 N.J. Super. 490
    , 503 (App. Div. 2019).
    "A mistrial should only be granted 'to prevent an obvious failure of justice.'"
    State v. Smith, 
    227 N.J. 36
    , 47 (2016) (quoting State v. Harvey, 
    151 N.J. 117
    ,
    205 (1997)); see also State v. Yough, 
    208 N.J. 385
    , 397 (2011) ("The grant of a
    mistrial is an extraordinary remedy"); State v. Witte, 
    13 N.J. 598
    , 611 (1953) (a
    mistrial should only be granted with the "greatest caution").        And, if "an
    A-2056-20
    47
    appropriate alternative course of action" exists, a mistrial is not a proper exercise
    of discretion. State v. Allah, 
    170 N.J. 269
    , 281 (2002).
    "The [F]ifth [A]mendment to the United States Constitution provides in
    part that '[n]o person . . . shall be compelled in any criminal case to be a witness
    against himself.'" State v. Hartley, 
    103 N.J. 252
    , 260 (1986) (citing U.S. Const.
    amend. V). The Fifth Amendment privilege is "firmly established as part of the
    common law of New Jersey and has been incorporated into our Rules of
    Evidence." 
    Ibid.
     (citation omitted); see also N.J.R.E. 503. The privilege, which
    must be invoked by the person claiming its protection, see State Farm Indem.
    Co. v. Warrington, 
    350 N.J. Super. 379
    , 383 (App. Div. 2002), encompasses the
    right to "refuse to testify at a criminal trial, and 'privileges him not to answer
    official questions put to him in any other proceeding, civil or criminal, formal
    or informal, where the answers might incriminate him in future criminal
    proceedings,'" 
    id. at 382
     (quoting Minnesota v. Murphy, 
    465 U.S. 420
    , 426
    (1984)).
    "It is reversible error for the prosecution to call a witness when [it] knows
    in advance that the witness is likely to invoke the Fifth Amendment because it
    would 'place before the jury innuendo evidence or inferences of evidence which
    the State could not get before the jury by the direct testimony of the witness. '"
    A-2056-20
    48
    State v. Jordon, 
    197 N.J. Super. 489
    , 502-03 (App. Div. 1984). But see Burns,
    
    192 N.J. at 334
     (finding it was not error for the prosecutor to call a witness who
    only expressed hesitancy to testify); State v. Williams, 
    59 N.J. 493
    , 499 (1971)
    (holding a trial court is not required "to accept the witness's mere statement that
    the answer will tend to incriminate him"). That is because a State's witness's
    invocation of the Fifth Amendment in the presence of the jury " 'operates to
    prejudice the defendant in the jury's eyes[,]'" as its "'practical result'"—despite
    producing no direct evidence—is creating adverse "'inferences that may be
    drawn which create a substantial danger of undue prejudice . . . and mislead the
    jury[.]'" State v. Nunez, 
    209 N.J. Super. 127
    , 133 (1986) (quoting State v.
    Jordon, 
    197 N.J. Super. 489
    , 503 (App. Div. 1984)); see also N.J.R.E. 532
    (providing in part neither the court nor counsel may comment upon the exercise
    of any privilege not to testify and no presumption shall arise from the exercise
    of such a privilege).
    Here, we are not presented with a circumstance where a witness exercised
    his right against self-incrimination in front of the jury or otherwise. Scott had
    effectively completed his direct examination in front of the jury without any
    assertion of that right during the first day of his testimony, before he told the
    sheriff's officers he might obtain an attorney. When Scott appeared for the
    A-2056-20
    49
    second day of his testimony—and first mentioned his concern about
    incriminating himself—he had already completed his direct testimony. On the
    second day he appeared at trial the State simply played the recording of his
    statement to the police and then ended its direct examination of him without
    asking him any further questions on direct.           At no time during his direct
    testimony or during his subsequent cross examination and re-direct examination
    did he assert his right against self-incrimination.
    A fair reading of the record compels the conclusion that the court 's brief
    statements concerning Scott and the Fifth Amendment were not directed to the
    jury and did not constitute directions to the jury. Defendants' claims to the
    contrary ignore the record. The court's comments were clearly directed to
    counsel and were intended to close the loop in response to defendants' objection
    to proceeding with Scott's testimony on the second day when Scott had appeared
    without counsel. As noted, after argument concerning whether the trial should
    continue after Scott, outside of the jury's presence expressed concern about
    incriminating himself, the court stated that if Scott had a good faith basis to take
    that position and so stated during his testimony, the court would deal with the
    issue at that time. More particularly, the court advised counsel it would address
    A-2056-20
    50
    any assertion of the Fifth Amendment privilege by Scott "when we get to it."
    The court never had to "get to it" because Scott never asserted the privilege.
    In our view, the court's sua sponte comments concerning Scott and the
    Fifth Amendment constituted an attempt to make clear that Scott had not, in fact,
    exercised his Fifth Amendment right not to incriminate himself during his direct
    examination so that there was no longer an issue the parties and the court needed
    to "deal with." The court's comments are riddled with legal jargon with short-
    hand references to the Rules of Evidence and a legal text. We discern no basis
    to conclude the jury was the intended audience for the comments or that the
    comments were delivered in a manner that would have permitted the jury to
    conclude the court had intended to instruct it.
    The court also never stated in front of the jury or otherwise that Scott had
    exercised his right not to incriminate himself. The court's sua sponte statement
    were clearly and expressly limited. The judge stated only that "to the extent"
    Scott "has exerted a Fifth Amendment privilege, what I've ruled is that . . . ."
    Thus, the court's comments could not have affected the jury because Scott had
    not to any "extent" exerted his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-
    incrimination.
    A-2056-20
    51
    That is not to say the court did not err by making its comments before the
    jury. The court should not have made what it intended to be a legal ruling on
    the issue of Scott's potential, but never realized, assertion of his Fifth
    Amendment privilege during his testimony before the jury. See N.J.R.E. 532.
    And the court's effort to make its ruling was unnecessary because Scott had not
    invoked the privilege. 8
    We are unconvinced, however, that the court's error prejudiced defendants
    or required a mistrial. As noted, the court's brief but errant reference to Scott
    and the Fifth Amendment privileged was directed to counsel and did not
    constitute an instruction to the jury. The court expressly stated that its comments
    applied only to the extent Scott had invoked the privilege and he had not done
    so. Thus, even if it had considered the court's comments, the jury was compelled
    to conclude they had no application to its analysis of the evidence or
    determination of defendants' guilt on the charges because Scott had never
    invoked his Fifth Amendment privilege and the court's comments applied only
    "to the extent" the privilege had been invoked.
    8
    We note the court was interrupted by defendants' objection to his comments
    before it actually made any ruling, and the court did not complete its ruling after
    the objection and its denial of defendants' mistrial motions.
    A-2056-20
    52
    As the Court explained in Burns in the context of a witness who had
    invoked the privilege before the jury, a "witness's refusal to answer a question"
    by invoking the Fifth Amendment privilege "add[s] critical weight to the
    prosecution's case in a form not subject to cross-examination, and thus unfairly
    prejudice[s] the defendant." 
    192 N.J. at 333-34
     (emphasis added) (quoting
    Namet v. United States, 
    373 U.S. 179
    , 187 (1963)).           There is no danger
    defendants suffered any prejudice from the court's comments since Scott never
    invoked the privilege and never refused to answer any questions posed during
    the trial. Aware that the court had made its comments and denied their mistrial
    motions, defendants were free to question Scott about any issues related to his
    testimony without any concern they would be prejudiced by his refusal to
    respond to their queries. Moreover, during cross-examination by Benjamin's
    counsel, Scott testified that he had a concern about self-incrimination but that it
    pertained solely to the potential he might incriminate himself by testifying at
    trial that his recorded statement to the police had been a lie.        Defendants
    therefore had the opportunity to fully vet Scott's self-incrimination concern at
    all times during his testimony at trial.
    In our assessment of a court's error, we must consider "whether in all the
    circumstances there [is] a reasonable doubt as to whether the error denied a fair
    A-2056-20
    53
    trial and a fair decision on the merits." State v. G.E.P., 
    243 N.J. 362
    , 389 (2020)
    (alteration in original) (quoting State v. Mohammed, 
    226 N.J. 71
    , 86-87,
    (2016)). For the reasons we have explained, we find no such reasonable doubt
    warranting a reversal of defendants' convictions. We do not find the court's
    limited comments concerning an absent invocation of Scott's Fifth Amendment
    privilege may have "tipped the scales" in the State's favor, such that it
    substantially contributed to the jury's verdict. State v. Jackson, 
    243 N.J. 52
    , 73
    (2020) (alteration in original) (quoting State v. Prall, 
    231 N.J. 567
    , 581 (2018)
    (finding an error harmless where the error "raise[s] a reasonable doubt as to
    whether [it] led the jury to a result it otherwise might not have reached.") ). For
    the same reasons, the court did not err by denying defendants' mistrial motion.
    Defendants also argue the court should have provided a curative
    instruction following their objections to the court's comments. The court asked
    defendants if they wanted it to provide a curative instruction to the jury, and
    defendants did not request that the court do so. Therefore, any error in the
    court's purported failure to provide a curative instruction was invited and does
    not provide grounds for reversal of defendants' convictions. See State v. A.R.,
    
    213 N.J. 542
    , 561 (2013) (explaining under the "invited-error doctrine . . . trial
    errors that 'were induced, encouraged or acquiesced in or consented to by
    A-2056-20
    54
    defense counsel ordinarily are not a basis for reversal on appeal'" (quoting State
    v. Corsaro, 
    107 N.J. 339
    , 345 (1987))). However, even if the court should have
    sua sponte provided a curative instruction, based on the circumstances presented
    and for the reasons we have explained, the putative error was not clearly capable
    of producing an unjust result, R. 2:10-2, such that defendants are entitled to
    reversal of their convictions.
    Dralle Challenges Alleged Lay-Opinion Testimony
    During the investigation, police conducted searches of defendants' cell
    phones. At trial, Sergeant Chris Robinson, Commander of the Camden County
    Prosecutor's Office's High Tech Crimes Unit, testified about the use of Cellebrite
    software that had been used to extract data from the phones. A detective who
    was unavailable at trial had extracted the data from Dralle's phone and generated
    an extraction report that Sergeant Robinson had reviewed and about which he
    testified.
    Dralle challenges for the first time the admission of testimony from
    Sergeant Robinson and Detective Houck about the extraction of information
    from both defendants' cell phones using Cellebrite and Axiom software.
    According to Dralle, Sergeant Robinson's and Detective Houck's testimony was
    improperly admitted as a lay opinion because expert testimony was required
    A-2056-20
    55
    regarding the software. 9 Dralle also challenges the resulting admission of the
    "text messages and internet searches" on defendants' phones, discovered as a
    result of the use of the Cellebrite and Axiom software. Because Dralle lodged
    no objection to the testimony, we review its admission on appeal for plain error.
    Singh, 245 N.J. at 13; R. 2:10-2. We find none.
    Generally, "[a] fact witness is one who testifies as to what 'he or she
    perceived through one or more of the senses[,]'" State v. Miller, 
    449 N.J. Super. 460
    , 470 (App. Div. 2017), rev'd on other grounds, 
    237 N.J. 15
     (2019) (quoting
    State v. McLean, 
    205 N.J. 438
    , 460 (2011)), and whose testimony consists of "a
    description of what the" person "did and saw" based on first-hand knowledge,
    
    ibid.
     This differs from an expert witness, who testifies based upon " 'scientific,
    technical, or other specialized knowledge . . . that is beyond the understanding
    of the average person,'" 
    ibid.
     (quoting State v. Simms, 
    224 N.J. 393
    , 403 (2016)),
    and a lay-opinion witness, who testifies "in the form of opinions or inferences
    if it (a) is rationally based on the perception of the witness and (b) will assist in
    9
    Dralle also argues the court erred by not holding a Frye hearing to establish
    the reliability of the software. 
    293 F. at 1013
    . We decline to address the merits
    of the claim because a request for the hearing was not made before the trial
    court. See State v. Witt, 
    223 N.J. 409
    , 419 (2015) ("For sound jurisprudential
    reasons, with few exceptions," we "'decline to consider questions or issues not
    properly presented to the trial court when an opportunity for such a presentation
    is available'" (quoting Robinson, 
    200 N.J. at 20
    )).
    A-2056-20
    56
    understanding the witness' testimony or in determining a fact in issue," id. at
    471 (quoting McLean, 205 N.J. at 456).
    Police officers may "testify in a variety of roles."        Id. at 470. Law
    enforcement officers may testify as a fact witness if their testimony "'does not
    convey information about what the officer "believed," "thought" or
    "suspected[.]"'" Ibid. (quoting McLean, 205 N.J. at 460). Officers may also
    testify as lay witnesses where their testimony is "'based on their personal
    observations and their long experience in areas where expert testimony might
    otherwise be deemed necessary.'" Id. at 471 (quoting State v. LaBrutto, 
    114 N.J. 187
    , 198 (1989)).
    For example, in Miller, we concluded that an officer who testified about
    his investigation of a defendant's laptop, and "merely reported what he found"
    through his utilization of "peer-to-peer software," testified only in the capacity
    of a fact witness because he did not provide an opinion on his findings. 
    Ibid.
    We also found that even if the officer's testimony "fell within the scope" of
    expert opinion testimony, its admission was harmless because the officer also
    testified that "he possessed sufficient education, training and experience to
    qualify as an expert in the field of computer forensics." 
    Ibid.
    A-2056-20
    57
    So too here. Our review of the record establishes that Sergeant Robinson
    testified in the capacity of a lay witness regarding his experience using the
    Cellebrite software. McLean, 205 N.J. at 456. Sergeant Robinson testified that
    he has worked for about five years in the Camden County's Prosecutor's Office
    as the Unit Commander for the High Tech Crimes Unit, which is a department
    that "process[es] all the electronic digital evidence that comes in through the
    County." He detailed the extensive training he had received, including training
    tailored to the use of Cellebrite—"a company that manufactures software and
    hardware to conduct extractions on cellular devices"—and how the High Tech
    Crimes Unit regularly utilizes Cellebrite's software to perform cell phone data
    extractions.   Sergeant Robinson also explained—based on his firsthand
    knowledge and use of the software—what information the software extracts and
    how it generated the "extraction reports" during the investigation that were
    admitted in evidence at trial.
    Sergeant Robinson's testimony was based on his personal knowledge and
    experience using Cellebrite software in his role as Unit Commander. LaBrutto,
    
    114 N.J. at 198
    . And, to the extent Sergeant Robinson testified as an expert
    witness based upon his specialized knowledge of Cellebrite, we find any error
    in the admission of his testimony harmless, R. 2:10-2, because he adequately
    A-2056-20
    58
    established his familiarity and understanding of cell-phone extractions through
    the use of Cellebrite software based on his experience and training as Unit
    Commander, see Miller, 
    449 N.J. Super. at 471
    .
    Similarly, Detective Houck testified he has worked for the High Tech
    Crimes Unit for seven-and-a-half years as a forensic examiner, utilizing
    Cellebrite software and Axiom software to extract data from cell phones. Then,
    in a succinct manner, he explained the difference between Cellebrite and Axiom
    and how each software is utilized by officers within the Unit. He also explained
    that he had reviewed the extraction reports of defendants' cell phones when they
    were completed to confirm that the software had extracted the information
    correctly and he had provided the extraction reports to Detective Barber, the
    lead investigating detective. Again, based upon Detective Houck 's personal
    knowledge of the software, and his experience and training related to it, we find
    no harmful error in the admission of his limited testimony at trial. R. 2:10-2.
    In sum, we reject Dralle's claim the detectives' testimony about the
    extraction of information from his cell phone constituted inadmissible expert
    testimony requiring reversal of his conviction.
    A-2056-20
    59
    Alleged Prosecutorial Misconduct
    Dralle asserts that the prosecutor engaged in misconduct by making
    improper comments during summation. Prior to addressing the comments about
    which Dralle complains, we summarize the principles that guide our analysis.
    We review the challenged comments for plain error because defendant did
    not object to them at trial. See State v. Tilghman, 
    345 N.J. Super. 571
    , 575
    (App. Div. 2001). "Prosecutors are afforded considerable leeway in closing
    arguments as long as their comments are reasonably related to the scope of the
    evidence presented."    State v. Frost, 
    158 N.J. 76
    , 82 (1999). However, a
    prosecutor "must refrain from improper methods that result in a wrongful
    conviction." State v. Smith, 
    167 N.J. 158
    , 177 (2001).
    Comments by a prosecutor will be grounds for reversal of a criminal
    conviction only if the conduct was so egregious as to deprive defendant of a fair
    trial. State v. Smith, 
    167 N.J. 158
    , 181 (2001). To deprive a defendant of a fair
    trial, the prosecutor's conduct "must have been 'clearly and unmistakably
    improper,' and must have substantially prejudiced defendant's fundamental right
    to have a jury fairly evaluate the merits of his defense." Id. at 182 (quoting State
    v. Timmendequas, 
    161 N.J. 515
    , 575 (1999)).
    A-2056-20
    60
    We evaluate challenged remarks not in isolation but in the context of a
    summation as a whole, State v. Atwater, 
    400 N.J. Super. 319
    , 335 (App. Div.
    2008), and the entire record, State v. Bey, 
    129 N.J. 557
    , 620 (1992). That is
    because "[n]ot every instance of misconduct in a prosecutor's summation will
    require a reversal of a conviction. There must be a palpable impact." State v.
    Swint, 
    328 N.J. Super. 236
    , 261 (App. Div. 2000). Where, as here, there is no
    objection to a prosecutor's remarks or comments at trial, "it is a sign 'that defense
    counsel did not believe the remarks were prejudicial' when they were made."
    State v. Pressley, 
    232 N.J. 587
    , 594 (2018) (quoting State v. Echols, 
    199 N.J. 344
    , 360 (2009)).
    "A prosecutor is permitted to respond to an argument raised by the
    defense so long as it does not constitute a foray beyond the evidence adduced at
    trial." State v. Munoz, 
    340 N.J. Super. 204
    , 216 (App. Div. 2001). When
    reviewing a prosecutor's summation, we "must not only weigh the impact of the
    prosecutor's remarks, but must also take into account defense counsel's opening
    salvo." 
    Ibid.
     (quoting United States v. Young, 
    470 U.S. 1
    , 12 (1985)).
    Viewing each of the prosecutor's statements in isolation or cumulatively,
    we find no impropriety and thus no comments that denied Dralle a fair trial.
    Indeed, all but one of the challenged comments were made in direct response to
    A-2056-20
    61
    arguments raised by defense counsel in summation. Munoz, 
    340 N.J. Super. at 216
    ; see also State v. Smith, 
    212 N.J. 365
    , 403-04 (2012).
    More particularly, Dralle first challenges the prosecutor's statement that
    the jury should "be very wary when someone tells you that a person is telling
    half the true [sic], half a lie, and they're the ones who can tell you what the half
    is true and what the half is a lie." As Dralle recognizes, however, the prosecutor
    made the statement in response to defendants' counsels' arguments to the jury
    that certain parts of Barner's testimony—those parts that were helpful to
    Dralle—were truthful while other parts—those portions that were harmful to
    Dralle—should be deemed not credible.
    Dralle claims the prosecutor's comments were improper because they
    "cast unjustified aspersions on" and "impugn[ed] the integrity" of defense
    counsel.   We disagree.     The comments were made in response to defense
    counsels' perhaps incongruous arguments about Barner's credibility and
    suggested to the jury only that it should be "wary" of defense counsel's claims
    that Barner was trustworthy only when he offered testimony helpful to
    defendants. We find nothing improper about the comment, which was properly
    made in direct response to defense counsel's arguments about Barner's
    credibility. Munoz, 
    340 N.J. Super. at 216
    .
    A-2056-20
    62
    Dralle also claims the prosecutor engaged in misconduct by asserting that
    both defense counsel had stated "with what sounded like certainty" that "Barner
    drove" to the Scordo residence on the night of the murder and that "he drove
    four people." Dralle asserts that by attributing "certainty" to defense counsels'
    statements, the prosecutor's comments improperly suggested that defendants had
    "revealed incriminating facts to their lawyers."
    Dralle reads too much into too little. The prosecutor's comment was made
    in further support of the State's contention that defendants wanted the jury to
    accept Barner's credibility as to facts that supported them but reject his
    testimony on the facts that established their guilt. And, contrary to Dralle 's
    contention, there is nothing in the comment suggesting that the prosecutor was
    arguing defense counsel had obtained incriminating information from their
    clients. Fairly read in context, the prosecutor merely pointed out that although
    defense counsel had relied with confidence on certain portions of Barner's
    testimony—including that he had driven four people to the Scordo home—they
    incongruously wanted the jury to find not credible that Dralle and Benjamin
    were among the four occupants of the car. Again, there was nothing improper
    about the prosecutor's comment; it was made in response to defense counsels'
    attack on Barner's credibility and constituted appropriate argument.
    A-2056-20
    63
    We also find no merit in Dralle's claim that the prosecutor engaged in
    misconduct by stating, "I think [defense counsel's] argument . . . is that [Barner]
    did something wrong so he consults an attorney and they come up with this crazy
    scheme where he's going to admit to being a driver but then put in a part where
    someone threatened him." Dralle further argues the prosecutor inappropriately
    commented on Barner's invocation of his right to counsel by stating, "[i]f
    [Barner] had this elaborate plan to get out of trouble and contact an attorney, I'm
    not a defense attorney, but it's a whole lot easier to just stay home."
    Dralle ignores the record. The prosecutor made the comments in response
    to defense counsel's claims during summation.         More specifically, defense
    counsel in summation—in what appears to have been an effort to diminish
    Barner's credibility—referenced the fact that Barner, after his first statement to
    police, had "looked at the internet" to search for immunity, defenses, and a
    lawyer, and he "had a lawyer and was granted immunity" when he testified.
    In Dralle's challenge to the prosecutor's comments about Barner and his
    search for counsel, he ignores that Barner's search for a lawyer was first raised
    by defense counsel and, in the prosecutor's summation, he attempted only to
    refute defense counsel's claims concerning Barner. Accordingly, we do not find
    the challenged statements improper and, instead, we are convinced they
    A-2056-20
    64
    constituted fair comment on Barner's internet search for a lawyer about which
    defense counsel raised in the first instance.
    Dralle last claims that the prosecutor "distorted the truth" "clarif[ying]" in
    summation that Barner "was not a friend of [defendants]" or in their "social
    circle." We reject the contention because whether Dralle and Barner were
    friends or in the same social circle was not an issue of import in the case and the
    prosecutor's argument is otherwise arguably supported by the evidence, and
    reasonable inferences based on the evidence, at trial. Munoz, 340 N.J. at 216.
    We therefore find no error in the prosecutor's comments about Barner's and
    Dralle's putative friendship or social circle.
    We also reject Dralle's challenge to the various comments because he
    makes no showing that even if improper, they deprived him of a fair trial, or
    otherwise "substantially prejudiced" his "fundamental right to have a jury fairly
    evaluate the merits of his defense" such that his conviction must be reversed.
    Smith, 167 N.J. at 181-82. And, because we have explained that the statements
    Dralle challenges were either made in response to defense counsels' claims or
    were supported by evidence or "reasonable inferences from that evidence," State
    v. Bradshaw, 
    195 N.J. 493
    , 510 (2008), we find no prosecutorial misconduct or
    any other grounds for reversal based on the claim.
    A-2056-20
    65
    Jury Charges
    Dralle asserts that the court's jury instruction on accomplice liability and
    immunity of a witness deprived him of a fair trial. Dralle argues the accomplice
    liability charge likely created confusion for the jury in its consideration of the
    felony-murder count because Dralle was charged with accomplice liability only
    on the robbery and knowing-and-purposeful murder charges, and the felony-
    murder charge was based only on the underlying crime of second-degree
    burglary. Dralle further argues the court's instruction on witness immunity,
    which was based on the model charge, improperly "creates the inference of
    credibility on the part of the immunized witness." Dralle did not object to any
    of the challenged jury charges at trial.
    "When a defendant does not request an instruction or fails to object . . . we
    review for plain error." State v. Dunbrack, 
    245 N.J. 531
    , 544 (2021); see also
    R. 1:7-2 ("no party may urge as error any portion of the charge to the jury or
    omissions therefrom unless objections are made thereto before the jury retires
    to consider its verdict . . . .").   Plain error in the context of a jury charge
    "requires demonstration of legal impropriety in the charge prejudicially
    affecting the substantial rights of the defendant and sufficiently grievous to
    justify notice by the reviewing court and to convince the court that of itself the
    A-2056-20
    66
    error possessed a clear capacity to bring about an unjust result."          State v.
    Singleton, 
    211 N.J. 157
    , 182-83 (2012) (quoting State v. Chapland, 
    187 N.J. 275
    , 289 (2006)).
    Proper jury "instructions are essential to a fair trial," and we consider any
    alleged error in the totality of the entire charge. State v. Clausell, 
    121 N.J. 298
    ,
    330 (1990); see also State v. Nero, 
    195 N.J. 397
    , 407 (2008) ("The alleged error
    is viewed in the totality of the entire charge, not in isolation."). And, while "[n]o
    party is entitled to have the jury charged in his or her own words[,]" State v.
    Whitaker, 
    402 N.J. Super. 495
    , 513 (App. Div. 2008) (quoting State v. Pleasant,
    
    313 N.J. Super. 325
    , 333 (App. Div. 1998)), the jury charge must contain "all
    'essential and fundamental issues and those dealing with substantially material
    points,'" 
    ibid.
     (quoting State v. Green, 
    86 N.J. 281
    , 290 (1981)).
    "Model jury charges are often helpful to trial judges in performing the
    important function of charging a jury" and "a jury charge is presumed to be
    proper when it tracks the model jury charge because the process to adopt model
    jury charges is 'comprehensive and thorough.'" State v. Cotto, 
    471 N.J. Super. 489
    , 543 (App. Div.) (quoting State v. R.B., 
    183 N.J. 308
    , 325 (2005)), , certif.
    denied, 
    252 N.J. 166
     (2022). Put differently, "[w]hen a jury instruction follows
    the model jury charge, although not determinative, 'it is a persuasive argument
    A-2056-20
    67
    in favor of the charge as delivered.'" Whitaker, 
    402 N.J. Super. at 514
     (quoting
    State v. Angoy, 
    329 N.J. Super. 79
    , 84 (App. Div. 2000)).
    Applying these principles to the portions of the jury charge challenged by
    Dralle, we discern no error. First, Dralle argues the court's charge on accomplice
    liability was confusing. He concedes that the court accurately instructed the
    jury that it could find him guilty of felony murder only if it first found him guilty
    of burglary as a predicate offense and that a felony-murder conviction could not
    be based on his commission of conspiracy to commit burglary.
    Dralle, however, claims the court erred in its subsequent instruction on
    accomplice liability. On accomplice liability, the court instructed as follows:
    [T]he State alleges that . . . defendant is equally guilty
    of the crimes committed by another person because he
    acted as an accomplice with the person that the specific
    crimes . . . charged be committed.          In order to
    find . . . defendant guilty of the specific crimes
    charged, the State must prove beyond a reasonable
    doubt each of the following elements. One, that another
    person committed the crimes of armed robbery and
    murder. I have already explained the elements of those
    offenses. Two, that . . . defendant solicited him to
    commit them or did aid or agree or attempt to aid him
    in planning or committing them.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    Dralle argues that, because the jury had been previously instructed on the
    elements of conspiracy, the accomplice-liability charge was confusing because
    A-2056-20
    68
    the court did not adequately identify the counts to which the accomplice-liability
    charge applied. Dralle cites to instances in the jury charge in which the court
    broadly referred to "the specific crimes charged" instead of "armed robbery and
    murder." Dralle further asserts that the court's instruction—that an accomplice
    is "equally guilty of the crimes committed by another person"—was contrary to
    the court's earlier instruction on the felony-murder count.
    Contrary to Dralle's claim, the portion of the accomplice liability charge
    we have cited expressly states it applies to the charges of murder and armed
    robbery. And, more importantly, the instruction defines as an element of a
    finding of accomplice liability that the State must prove that "another person
    committed the crimes of robbery and murder." The accomplice liability charge
    does not refer to any of the other crimes charged against defendant about which
    the jury was required or permitted to find "another person" had committed.
    Moreover, in making his argument, Dralle ignores the remainder of the
    jury instruction, in which the court again makes clear that accomplice liability
    applied solely to the crimes of robbery and murder. The court instructed:
    In order to convict a defendant as an accomplice to the
    specific      crimes    charged,    you      must      find
    that . . . defendant had the purpose to participate in that
    particular crime. He must act with the purpose of
    promoting or facilitating the commission of the
    substantive crimes with which he is charged.
    A-2056-20
    69
    It is not sufficient to prove only that . . . defendant had
    knowledge that another person was going to commit the
    crimes charged.         The State must prove that it
    was . . . defendant's conscious object that the specific
    conduct charged be committed. In sum, in order to
    find . . . defendant guilty of committing the crimes of
    armed robbery and murder, the State must prove each
    of the following elements beyond a reasonable doubt:
    that another person committed the crimes of armed
    robbery and murder, that's one; two, that . . . defendant
    solicited him to commit them or did aid or agree or
    attempt to aid him or her in planning or committing
    them; three, that . . . defendant's purpose was to
    promote or facilitate the commission of the offenses;
    four, that . . . defendant possessed the criminal state of
    mind that is required to be proved against the person
    who actually committed the criminal act.
    [(Emphasis added).]
    The court's complete instruction on accomplice liability did not present
    any opportunity for confusion about the offenses—robbery and murder—to
    which accomplice liability applied. The court used the language of the model
    jury charge, see Model Jury Charges (Criminal), "Liability for Another's
    Conduct (N.J.S.A. 2C:2-6)" (rev. June 11, 2018), 10 which we presume to be
    proper, Cotto, 471 N.J. Super. at 543.
    10
    The accomplice liability model jury charge has since been updated, see Model
    Jury Charges (Criminal), "Liability for Another's Conduct (N.J.S.A. 2C:2-
    6(c)(1)(c)) Accomplice–Legal Duty" (approved June 7, 2021), but none of the
    changes are relevant to Dralle's arguments on appeal.
    A-2056-20
    70
    We also note "the general presumption that jurors act in good faith and
    seek to comply with the court's instructions." State v. Bey, 
    112 N.J. 45
    , 83
    (1988), and application of the presumption here requires the conclusion that the
    jury could not have been confused about the only crimes to which accomplice
    liability applied. The court's charge permitted a finding of accomplice liability
    only on the robbery and murder charges.
    Dralle also challenges the court's instruction on Barner's immunity. Dralle
    acknowledges that the court instructed the jury in accordance with the model
    charge, see Model Jury Charges (Criminal), "Witness Immunity" (approved Feb.
    25, 1991), but asks that we find that charge is so legally erroneous that its use
    constituted plain error. He claims that the model charge "creates the inference
    of credibility on the part of the immunized witness by explicitly stating that the
    State may prosecute the witness for false or perjured testimony." Dralle further
    objects to the court informing the jury that Barner was ordered to testify as that
    "create[d] an aura of reliability" for his testimony.
    We find no language in the charge suggesting immunized witnesses
    should be deemed or considered credible. The charge states that "[t]he fact that
    a witness has been granted immunity with respect to any testimony which
    incriminates them is a factor . . . which [the jury] should consider in evaluating
    A-2056-20
    71
    [the witness's] testimony and in determining the weight" given to the testimony.
    Nothing in that language imputes credibility to a witness who testifies under a
    grant of immunity. To the contrary, as part of the instruction, the court explained
    that a witness who testifies under a grant of immunity "should be given careful
    scrutiny" and "[i]n weighing the testimony," the jury "may consider whether in
    order to obtain . . . the immunity for himself, he's telling a lie to you or whether,
    having been granted immunity, he is telling the truth."             That language
    undermines any claim the model instruction erroneously imputes credibility to
    a witness testifying under a grant of immunity.
    For those reasons, we do not the find court's instruction in accordance with
    the model jury charge constituted error or otherwise could have led to an unjust
    result so as to constitute plain error, R. 2:10-2; Singleton, 211 N.J. at 182-83.
    Jury Questions
    Benjamin and Dralle contend for the first time on appeal that the court
    erred in its response to the jury's request for a playback of the testimony of
    Barner and cross-examination of Scott and that this error deprived them of a fair
    trial. More particularly, they claim that when the jury requested to hear the
    testimony of Barner, the court improperly commented that it would take four
    hours for the readback of the testimony and that caused the jury to withdraw its
    A-2056-20
    72
    request. Benjamin argues the court exerted undue influence on the jury in
    response to its request for a playback of Scott's cross-examination because the
    court informed the jury it must also hear a read-back of his direct examination
    as well. We review the claims for plain error. R. 2:10-2; State v. Weston, 
    222 N.J. 277
    , 294 (2015).
    "It is well-established that 'the reading of all or part of the testimony of
    one or more of the witnesses at a trial, criminal or civil, at the specific request
    of the jury during their deliberations is discretionary with the trial court.'" State
    v. Wilson, 
    165 N.J. 657
    , 660 (2000) (quoting State v. Wolf, 
    44 N.J. 176
    , 185
    (1965)).     "Absent 'some unusual circumstance,' those requests should be
    granted." State v. Miller, 
    205 N.J. 109
    , 119-20 (2011) (quoting Wolf, 
    44 N.J. at 185
    ).
    In Miller, the Court established "certain guidelines for the playback of
    video testimony," finding in part that a court shall not decline such a request
    merely because it "'would take time.'" 
    Ibid.
     (quoting Wolf, 
    44 N.J. at 186
    ). The
    general rule is that if a jury requests a readback of the testimony of a witness,
    the readback should include both direct and cross-examination "so that evidence
    may be considered in its proper context." 
    Ibid.
     Although trial courts "should
    honor a jury's specific request to hear only limited parts of a witness's
    A-2056-20
    73
    testimony[,]" that playback should still "include[] relevant direct and cross -
    examination." Id. at 123. However, "[j]urors should not be required to watch
    or hear more testimony than they ask for" and "[i]f necessary, the trial judge can
    clarify what testimony the jury wants repeated." Ibid.
    We discern no error, let alone plain error, in the court's responses to the
    jury playback requests. The court gave the jury accurate information as to the
    time it would take to comply with its request to hear Barner's testimony for
    scheduling purposes. And, the time it would take to comply with the jury 's
    request was particularly relevant because the court had earlier informed the
    parties and the jurors that trial would stop at 3:00 p.m. that day in light of an
    impending holiday weekend. The court did not decline the jury's request based
    on the amount of time it would take, Miller, 
    205 N.J. at 119-20
    , or implement a
    time restriction for the jury's deliberations based on its request, see State v.
    Nelson, 
    304 N.J. Super. 561
    , 564-65 (App. Div. 1997). The court's mention of
    the time—four hours—it anticipated it would take to play back Barner's
    testimony constituted nothing more than a courtesy extended by the court to the
    jury to keep the jury informed as to the manner in which the playback would
    proceed.
    A-2056-20
    74
    We also find no merit in Benjamin's contention that after the court
    explained the playback of Barner's testimony would take four hours and the jury
    stated it no longer wished to hear the playback of the testimony, the court was
    required to inquire whether the jury wished to narrow its request for "some
    particular portion of Barner's testimony." "When a jury requests clarification, a
    trial judge 'is obligated to clear the confusion.'" State v. Berry, 
    254 N.J. 129
    ,
    145-46 (2023) (quoting State v. Savage, 
    172 N.J. 374
    , 394 (2002)). Here, the
    jury did not request clarification from the court regarding the playback, ibid.,
    and instead rescinded its playback request. Benjamin cites no support for his
    argument that the court was obligated to intervene in the jury's remaining
    deliberative process after the court sufficiently answered the jury's question
    regarding the playback of the testimony, and the jury did not seek further
    clarification on the matter.
    Additionally, although Dralle asserts that the jury requested only a
    playback of a certain part of Scott's testimony—his cross-examination—and the
    court should have honored that request, trial courts must "include[] relevant
    direct and cross-examination" "so that evidence may be considered in its proper
    context." Miller, 
    205 N.J. at 122
    . The court deemed it necessary that both
    Scott's direct and cross-examination be played to fairly comply with the jury's
    A-2056-20
    75
    request, explaining it "really had to play all of [Scott's testimony], not just part
    of it" so the jury could get a "fair and complete reminder of what" Scott had
    said. The court did not abuse its discretion by seeking to ensure the jury
    considered the requested playback of the cross-examination in the complete
    context provided by a playback of the direct and cross-examination.
    Dralle also argues for the first time that the trial court erred by failing to
    inquire about a jury substitution question posed by the jury.               During
    deliberations, the jury sent a note to the court asking if "a juror who is
    deliberating" can "voluntarily swap with an alternate."          While the court
    addressed the note with counsel, a court officer advised the court he had "asked
    what juror it was" and the jury responded that it was a "blanket question" and
    none of the jurors had "any type of issue or needs to come off the jury." The
    court appropriately brought the jury into the courtroom and asked, "am I correct
    in my understanding that there is not a particular . . . juror who is asking to
    switch, but it's just a general question about that?" The jury foreperson replied,
    "Right," and the court advised the jury that deliberating jurors could not switch
    with an alternate," and that alternates are used only when necessary.
    Dralle argues the court abused its discretion by not questioning the jury
    further. According to Dralle, the court should have conducted an "individual
    A-2056-20
    76
    voir dire of each juror" because "[a] juror being pressured or bullied might be
    too shy or fearful to come forward in front of others." We review for the claim
    for plain error, R. 2:10-2, and in doing so, find no support for Dralle's
    contention.
    We "traditionally have accorded trial courts deference in exercising
    control over matters pertaining to the jury." State v. R.D., 
    169 N.J. 551
    , 560
    (2001). Under Rule 1:8-2(d)(1), if, "after submission of the case to the jury, a
    juror dies or is discharged by the court because of illness or other inability to
    continue, the court may direct" that the discharged juror be replaced by an
    alternate. "Any inquiry to determine whether a deliberating juror should be
    removed and replaced with an alternate must be carefully circumscribed to
    'protect the confidentiality of jury communications.'" State v. Musa, 
    222 N.J. 554
    , 564-68 (2015) (quoting State v. Ross, 
    218 N.J. 130
     (2014)). The "court
    must diligently avoid 'the inadvertent disclosure of confidential information by
    a juror'" because "'[m]aintaining the secrecy of jury deliberations for the purpose
    of encouraging free and vigorous discourse in the jury room' is of paramount
    importance." 
    Ibid.
     (quoting State v. Jenkins, 
    182 N.J. 112
    , 134 (2004)). Further,
    "[i]f a jury's question is ambiguous, a trial judge 'must clarify the jury's inquiry
    A-2056-20
    77
    by ascertaining the meaning of its request.'" Berry, 254 N.J. at 146 (quoting
    Savage, 
    172 N.J. at 394
    ).
    The court took the appropriate steps following its receipt of the jury 's
    question. After confirming that no individual juror sought to switch with an
    alternate juror, the court correctly informed the jury that generally, no
    substitutions can be made with an alternate juror. See e.g., State v. Jenkins, 
    182 N.J. 112
    , 124 (2004) (forbidding juror substitution "when a deliberating juror 's
    removal is in any way related to the deliberative process"). The court was not
    required to take additional action to determine the underlying cause of the jury's
    question. The court made sufficient inquiry to determine that no juror sought to
    be excused, Berry, 254 N.J. at 146. And, had it taken any further investigation
    of the genesis of the note, the court would risked improperly invading the
    confidentiality of the jury's communications and broader deliberative process,
    Musa, 
    222 N.J. at 568
    .
    IV.
    Dralle and Benjamin separately argue that their sentences should be
    reversed because the court failed to assess and weigh their relative youth as a
    mitigating factor in its sentencing calculus. Benjamin was a seventeen-year-old
    A-2056-20
    78
    juvenile when Scordo's home was burglarized and Deanna was murdered. Dralle
    was a twenty-year old adult at the time.
    Benjamin argues that the court misapplied the factors set forth in United
    Miller v. Alabama, 
    567 U.S. 460
     (2012), in its determination of his sentence.
    Dralle argues that the sentencing court "did not properly consider the
    ramifications of" mitigating factor fourteen, which requires that a sentencing
    court consider that "a defendant was under [twenty-six] years of age at the time
    of the commission of the offense," N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(b)(14).
    The court imposed on Dralle a forty-year sentence subject to NERA and
    Benjamin a thirty-eight-year sentence subject to NERA based on the court's
    detailed findings of statutory aggravating and mitigating factors under N.J.S.A.
    2C:44-1(a) and (b), and its determination that the aggravating factors
    outweighed the mitigating factors for each defendant. Defendants' respective
    arguments on appeal do not challenge the court's findings as to the statutory
    aggravating or mitigating factors other than, as noted, they claim for different
    reasons the court did not properly consider their relative youth in its imposition
    of their sentences.
    We review a court's sentencing decision for an abuse of discretion, State
    v. Konecny, 
    250 N.J. 321
    , 334 (2022), and will reverse a sentence only if
    A-2056-20
    79
    (1) the sentencing guidelines were violated (2) the
    aggravating and mitigating factors found by the
    sentencing court were not based upon competent and
    credible evidence in the record; or (3) "the application
    of the guidelines to the facts of [the] case makes the
    sentence clearly unreasonable so as to shock the
    judicial conscience."
    [State v. Fuentes, 
    217 N.J. 57
    , 70 (2014) (alteration in
    original) (citing State v. Roth, 
    95 N.J. 334
    , 363-65
    (1984)).]
    "The test is not whether a reviewing court would have reached a different
    conclusion on what an appropriate sentence should be; it is whether, on the basis
    of the evidence, no reasonable sentencing court could have imposed the sentence
    under review." State v. M.A., 
    402 N.J. Super. 353
    , 370 (App. Div. 2008)
    (quoting State v. Tarver, 
    272 N.J. Super. 414
    , 435 (App. Div. 1994)).
    In Miller, the United States Supreme Court held that trial courts
    sentencing juveniles in "homicide cases" must "take into account how children
    are different, and how those differences counsel against irrevocably sentencing
    them to a lifetime in prison." 567 U.S. at 480. In doing so, the Court identified
    several factors which courts should consider: (1) defendant's "chronological age
    and its hallmark features—among them, immaturity, impetuosity, and failure to
    appreciate risks and consequences"; (2) "the family and home environment that
    surrounds [defendant]—and from which he cannot usually extricate himself—
    A-2056-20
    80
    no matter how brutal or dysfunctional"; (3) "the circumstances of the homicide
    offense, including the extent of [defendant's] participation in the conduct and
    the way familial and peer pressures may have affected him"; (4) whether
    defendant "might have been charged and convicted of a lesser offense if not for
    incompetencies associated with youth—for example, his inability to deal with
    police officers or prosecutors (including on a plea agreement) or his incapacity
    to assist his own attorneys"; and (5) "the possibility of rehabilitation . . . ." Id.
    at 477-78.
    In State v. Zuber, 
    227 N.J. 422
    , 447 (2017), our Supreme Court held that
    Miller's directive to consider how children are constitutionally "different" is one
    that "applies with equal strength to a sentence that is the practical equivalent of
    life without parole," including for defendants serving "lengthy term -of-years
    sentences that amount to life without parole," though lacking that "formal
    designation." To that end, the Court held that trial courts "must evaluate the
    Miller factors when they sentence a juvenile to a lengthy period of parole
    ineligibility for a single offense," or "when they consider a lengthy period of
    parole ineligibility in a case that involves multiple offenses at different times" —
    that is, when the courts "decide whether to run counts consecutively and when
    they determine the length of the aggregate sentence." 
    Ibid.
     Here, as noted, the
    A-2056-20
    81
    court imposed a thirty-eight-year sentence on Benjamin, of which he must serve
    more than thirty-two years without parole eligibility under NERA, and the State
    does not dispute that the court was required to apply the Miller factors in its
    determination of his sentence. 11
    Benjamin contends the court's application of the Miller factors supports
    "a sentence at the lowest end of the spectrum." He does not dispute that the
    court made detailed findings concerning the Miller factors, and, in our view, the
    court's findings are well-supported by the record. 12 What is missing from the
    court's sentencing analysis, however, is any explanation as to the role, if any, its
    findings of the Miller factors, individually and collectively, played in its
    11
    We recognize that Benjamin may also apply for resentencing after he serves
    twenty years of the sentence imposed. State v. Comer, 
    249 N.J. 359
    , 401 (2022).
    12
    More particularly, the court noted that as to factor one, Benjamin was
    seventeen years old at the time of the offense and assigned the factor moderate
    weight; as to factor two, the court found Benjamin's home life "was lacking
    substantially in supervision and guidance" and assigned the factor moderate
    weight; as to factor three, the court found Benjamin was self-assured and
    independently making his own decisions surrounding execution of the murder
    and assigned the factor low weight; as to factor four, the court determined
    Benjamin's immaturity impaired his ability to listen to the advice of his counsel
    in the proceedings and assigned the factor moderate weight; and as to factor five,
    the court noted that Benjamin's age, as well as his documented accomplishments
    and attitude while incarcerated, suggest a high potential for rehabilitation, and
    assigned the factor moderate to high weight. See Miller, 567 U.S. at 477-78;
    Zuber, 
    227 N.J. at 446-47
    .
    A-2056-20
    82
    determination of the aggregate sentence imposed. See Zuber, 
    227 N.J. at 450
    (explaining the "assessment of the juvenile about to be sentenced" must include
    application of the Miller principles).
    The court assigned at least some weight to each of the Miller factors such
    that it might be expected that their collective weight in some manner supported
    imposition of a lesser, as to opposed to a greater, sentence. It was therefore
    insufficient for the sentencing court to simply make its findings as to each Miller
    factor without further explaining, and making findings as to, the manner in
    which the factors affected the court's sentencing decision.
    The absence of such findings permits the conclusion that although the
    court properly found the factors, it did not consider and apply them in
    determining Benjamin's sentence.         Moreover, the absence of such findings
    renders impossible proper appellate review of the court's reliance on and
    consideration of the Miller factors in its imposition of Benjamin's lengthy
    sentence and concomitant period of parole ineligibility under NERA.            See
    Comer, 249 N.J. at 404 (explaining sentencing courts must "make a thorough
    record of their findings to ensure fairness and facilitate review" (citing State v.
    Torres, 
    246 N.J. 246
     (2021); Fuentes, 
    217 N.J. at 70-74
    ; N.J.S.A. 2C43-2(e); R.
    3:21-4(h))). We therefore deem it appropriate to vacate Benjamin's sentence
    A-2056-20
    83
    and remand for resentencing at which the court shall include in its analysis its
    findings as to the Miller factors and an explanation as to the effect of those
    findings on its determination of Benjamin's sentence.13
    Dralle contends that the court did not probably consider his youth as a
    mitigating factor under N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(b)(14).14 In imposing sentence, the
    court must "identify whether any of N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)'s . . . aggravating
    factors and N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(b)'s . . . mitigating factors apply." Fuentes, 
    217 N.J. at 72
    . The court must make findings on the relevant statutory factors based
    on "competent, reasonably credible evidence[,]'' 
    ibid.
     (quoting State v. Roth, 
    95 N.J. 334
    , 363 (1984)), and then "balance the relevant aggravating factors and
    13
    Our decision to vacate Benjamin's sentence and remand for resentencing shall
    not be interpreted as expressing an opinion of the aggregate sentence imposed
    by the court. As the Court explained in Zuber, "even when judges . . . use the
    Miller factors at sentencing, a small number of juveniles will receive lengthy
    sentences with substantial periods of parole ineligibility . . . ." 
    227 N.J. at 451
    .
    We vacate and remand for resentencing to permit the court to consider and make
    appropriate findings concerning the Miller factors and the manner in which the
    factors affect the court's sentencing decision. Of course, the remand court shall
    also make appropriate findings as to all other issues pertinent to the imposition
    of sentence.
    14
    The Miller factors have no application to Dralle because he was not a juvenile
    at the time he committed the crimes for which he was convicted. State v. Ryan,
    
    249 N.J. 581
    , 596 (2022) (refusing to "extend Miller's protections to defendants
    sentenced for crimes committed when those defendants were over the age of
    eighteen").
    A-2056-20
    84
    mitigating factors" by assigning each "appropriate weight in a case -specific
    balancing process." Id. at 72-73.
    The court sentenced Dralle to a term of forty years, subject to the
    requirements of NERA. The court made thorough, reasoned findings as to each
    of the statutory aggravating and mitigating factors, finding aggravating factors:
    three, "the risk that defendant will commit another offense," N.J.S.A. 2C:44 -
    1(a)(3); six, the extent and seriousness of defendant's prior criminal record,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)(6); and nine, the need for deterring defendant and others,
    N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)(9).15 The court determined each of the aggravating factors
    was entitled to "high weight."
    The court then found that mitigating factors eight, nine and fourteen
    applied.   See N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(b).     For factor eight, whether "defendant's
    conduct was the result of circumstances unlikely to recur," N.J.S.A. 2C:44 -
    1(b)(8), and factor nine, "[t]he character and attitude of" defendant and whether
    15
    As to the relevant aggravating factors, see N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(a)(3), (6), and
    (9), the court relied on Dralle's prior conviction for unlawful possession of a
    weapon—a metal pipe—in an incident that occurred only ten days prior to the
    murder. The court further noted that Dralle was seen on video "taken shortly
    after the murder . . . partying" with Benjamin and others with funds probably
    from "the monetary proceeds of the theft." The court also noted the "strong need
    to deter" Dralle "and others from engaging in the horrific behavior [ in which he
    had] engaged in this case."
    A-2056-20
    85
    it indicates he "is unlikely to commit another offense," N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(b)(9),
    the court noted that Dralle "grew up in a good and strong family" and "did well
    in school, especially in athletics" but "[s]omehow he went adrift from his strong
    family morals and principles he seemed to embrace in his youth." The court
    observed that Dralle's "bad judgment . . . exercised here is characteristic of him
    generally" but that "[h]e is remorseful." The court further found "that upon
    release from State Prison . . . with the support of family and friends, he can be a
    productive and law-abiding citizen."
    The court also found defendant's age as a mitigating factor in accordance
    with N.J.S.A. 2C:44-1(b)(14), which requires that a sentencing court consider
    whether a defendant was under twenty-six years of age at the time of committing
    the offense. The court noted that Dralle "is [twenty-three] years old and was
    only [twenty] when he committed this offense" and assigned mitigating factor
    fourteen, as well as mitigating factors eight and nine, "moderate weight."
    We are satisfied the court properly evaluated the statutory factors based
    on "competent, reasonably credible evidence"—including, but not limited to,
    Dralle's relative youth under mitigating factor fourteen—and balanced those
    factors based on the specific facts presented by Dralle's case. Fuentes, 
    217 N.J. at 72
    .   The court's determination the aggravating factors outweighed the
    A-2056-20
    86
    mitigating factors is supported by competent evidence, M.A., 
    402 N.J. Super. at 370
    , and we otherwise find no basis to question the court's exercise of its
    discretion in imposing sentence, Fuentes, 
    217 N.J. at 70
    . In sum, defendant
    offers no basis in the record to conclude that the court abused its discretion by
    imposing a lengthy sentence for the very serious crimes for which he was
    convicted, and we otherwise determine the sentence imposed does not shock the
    judicial conscience. 
    Ibid.
    To the extent we have not addressed defendants' remaining arguments, we
    considered them and are satisfied they are without sufficient merit to warrant
    further discussion in a written opinion. R. 2:11-3(e)(2).
    In A-2511-20, affirmed. In A-2056-20, affirmed in part, vacated in part,
    and remanded for resentencing. See generally State v. Randolph, 
    201 N.J. 330
    (2012). We do not retain jurisdiction.
    A-2056-20
    87
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A-2056-20-A-2511-20

Filed Date: 11/4/2024

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 11/4/2024